From: Andrew Dunbar (hippietrail@yahoo.com)
Date: Wed May 15 2002 - 00:16:45 EDT
 --- Martin Sevior
<msevior@mccubbin.ph.unimelb.edu.au> wrote: > 
> From the interview with Bart he said he'd be very
> interested in joint
> efforts for Office filters. Well wv is of course
> GPL'd so they can't link
> it directly, however it would be rather easy to wrap
> wv with a bonobo
> layer which can be executed from within hancom with
> no problems. We of
> course could just link it directly :-)
> 
> Dom might want to do this anyway to provide an MS
> Word filter for any
> Gnome application.
> 
> The great win for us is that we get paid developer
> support on wv. 
> 
> However wv is Dom's lib and it will be some work for
> him to support this.
> 
> Cheers
> 
> Martin
> 
> On Tue, 14 May 2002, Paul Rohr wrote:
> 
> > At 03:11 PM 5/13/02 -0700, I wrote:
> > >Instead, I'll put the ball back in your court. 
> Can you think of a better 
> > >way to take Bart up on his offer of help?  I'm
> pretty sure he's serious, and 
> > >I never want to pass up paid help from a company
> that knows something about 
> > >word processors.  
> > 
> > After some private email with Alan, here are a few
> better ideas:
> > 
> > 1.  See if they're interested in working on Pango.
> 
> > --------------------------------------------------
> > Having shipped a Korean word processor on Windows
> (no longer supported from 
> > what I hear), Hancom is now moving into the Linux
> world in a big way.  
> > Insofar as we have a strong interest in:
> > 
> >   - having Pango run well on non-Linux platforms,
> and 
> >   - having it do a great job of supporting CJK
> languages,
> > 
> > perhaps this is an area where they could apply
> their existing expertise in 
> > ways that would help us, the GNOME project, and
> themselves.  I'm betting 
> > that Hancom engineers may not be free to
> contribute to our GPL codebase, but 
> > Pango is LGPL, so that should still a licensable
> option for them. 
> 
> 
> This is a good idea but I beleive they have already
> decided on QT 3 which
> provides this. I don't know how good QT 3 is
> compared to pango though.
I was under the impression that QT 3 handled Unicode
but not that it takes care of the funky glyph
replacement, reordering, etc that Pango does... but
I'm not 100% sure.
Andrew.
> > 2.  See if they'd be willing to fund some
> high-quality TTF fonts.
> >
>
-----------------------------------------------------------------
> > As we all know, there just aren't enough
> high-quality Unicode fonts 
> > available for use on Unix.  Indeed, I suspect that
> the situation is even 
> > worse for complex scripts like Korean.  
> > 
> 
> 
> This is a good idea but I think we're unlikely to
> get much joy here. There
> is no incentive for a font foundary to provide GPL
> or LGPL'd fonts so my
> guess is that unless they purchased the fonts
> outright we would get much
> joy.
> 
> > I suspect that any fonts they already have use
> other encodings, but 
> > depending on how they licensed those fonts in the
> first place, perhaps 
> > they'd be willing to fund an effort to convert
> them to Unicode and release 
> > them.  (Or not.  That might be a key part of the
> value-add for their 
> > distro.)  Still, that's right up Bart's alley.  
> > 
> > action
> > ------
> > Would any of our i18n folks be interested in
> pursuing either of these ideas 
> > with Bart?  Alan's looking to bow out of that
> conversation, and I'm way over 
> > my AbiWord time budget for the week.  
> > 
> > Thanks,
> > Paul
> > 
>  
=====
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