Published:
Nokia to Increase Adoption of Qt With Additional Licensing Option
ESPOO,Finland, January 14 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Nokia (NYSE: NOK)
today announced that its Qt cross-platform User Interface (UI) and
application framework for desktop and embedded platforms will be available
under the Lesser General Public License (LGPL) version 2.1 license from the
release of Qt 4.5, scheduled for March 2009. Previously, Qt has been made
available to the open source community under the General Public License (GPL)
license. In addition, Qt will now be available from the new domain,
http://www.qtsoftware.com.
The move to LGPL licensing will provide open source and commercial
developers with more permissive licensing than GPL and so increase
flexibility for developers. In addition, Qt source code repositories will be
made publicly available and will encourage contributions from desktop and
embedded developer communities. With these changes, developers will be able
to actively drive the evolution of the Qt framework.
Qt 4.5 will also be available under commercial licensing terms, while
licensing for previous versions of Qt remains unchanged. In addition, service
offerings for Qt will be expanded to ensure that all Qt development projects
can have access to the same levels of support, independent of the selected
license.
"Broader use of Qt by even more leading companies will result in valuable
feedback and increased contributions, ensuring that Qt remains the
best-in-class, cross-platform UI and application framework. The accelerated
development of Qt will allow developers, including Nokia, to deliver better
devices and applications, reduce time to market and enable a wider deployment
base for their solutions," said Sebastian Nystrom, Vice President, Qt
Software, Nokia.
"Nokia is making significant contributions to open source communities
through ongoing work with Qt, its contribution of Symbian OS and S60 to the
Symbian Foundation and open development of the Maemo platform," said Kai
Oistamo, Executive Vice President, Devices, Nokia. "By moving to LGPL,
opening Qt's source code repositories and encouraging more contributions, Qt
users will have more of a stake in the development of Qt, which will in turn
encourage wider adoption. Nokia will be able to leverage improvements in Qt
across S60 on Symbian OS, Maemo and OVI services without rewriting the source
code."
"Combining Nokia's OS-independent Qt application framework with
Freescale's enablement software offers OEMs and applications developers a
unique freedom of choice in selecting the most appropriate Freescale chipset
while allowing the developer to develop and maintain a single code base of
their application," says Raja Tabet, Vice President of Solutions and
Enablement Technology at Freescale. "The LGPL model is an excellent and
timely licensing option that will accelerate the adoption/deployment of the
Freescale/Qt combined platform."
"Qt is used extensively in Kubuntu and KDE applications, and Canonical is
delighted to see this breakthrough in its licensing model," said Mark
Shuttleworth, founder of the Ubuntu project. "Qt's new licensing terms will
help us deliver ever more 'lustful' applications to users. Nokia's continued
investment in cross-platform Qt libraries, and the Linux platform, is a major
driver of innovation in the free software desktop and mobile device stack."
"We applaud Nokia's move to simplify the licensing of Qt," said Joe
Miller, vice president, Platform & Technology Development, Linden Labs. "We
find Qt to be intriguing and innovative technology regardless of licensing,
but the new licensing has greatly simplified our decision to pursue QtWebkit
for integration into Second Life."
"Qt being available under the terms of the LGPL streamlines the licensing
of applications built using KDE components on top of Qt-based applications,"
said Sebastian Kugler, KDE e.V. Board Member. "This more permissive licensing
will further lower the barrier for adoption of Qt and KDE technologies. The
KDE team welcomes opening up the development process and is looking forward
to further improved collaboration between KDE and Qt Software."
About Qt
Qt is a cross-platform application framework. Using Qt, you can develop
applications and user interfaces once, and deploy them across many desktop
and embedded operating systems without rewriting the source code. Qt
Software, formerly Trolltech, was acquired by Nokia in June 2008. For more
details about Qt Software and its new licensing model, please visit
http://www.qtsoftware.com
About Nokia
Nokia is the world leader in mobility, driving the transformation and
growth of the converging Internet and communications industries. We make a
wide range of mobile devices with services and software that enable people to
experience music, navigation, video, television, imaging, games, business
mobility and more. Developing and growing our offering of consumer Internet
services, as well as our enterprise solutions and software, is a key area of
focus. We also provide equipment, solutions and services for communications
networks through Nokia Siemens Networks.
http://www.nokia.com
http://www.qtsoftware.com
SOURCE Nokia Corporation
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