Sony BRAVIA KDL-55HX751 Operating Instructions Manual page 52

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PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
SUCH DAMAGES.
END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
How
to
Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
If you develop a new program, and
you
want it to be
of the greatest possible use to
the
public, the best
way to
achieve
this is to make
it
free software
which
everyone can redistribute
and change
under these
terms.
To do so, attach the following
notices
to the program.
It is safest to
attach
them to
the
start of each
source file to most effectively
convey
the exclusion
of
warranty; and
each file should have at least the
"copyright"
line and a pointer to
where
the full notice
is found.
<one
line to give the
program's
name and a brief
idea of what it does.> Copyright (C) <year>
<name
of
author>
This program is free
software; you
can
redistribute
it
and/or modify
it
under the terms
of
the
GNU General
Public License as published
by
the Free Software
Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at
your
option)
any later version.
This program is distributed in
the
hope that it
will
be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without
even the implied warranty
of MERCHANTABILITY
or
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE. See
the
GNU General Public License for more
details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General
Public License along with this
program;
if not,
write
to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin
Street,
Fifth Floor, Boston,
MA 02110-1301,
USA.
Also
add
information on how to contact you by
electronic and paper mail.
If
the program
is
interactive, make
it output a short
notice like this
when it starts
in
an
interactive
mode:
Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C)
year
name
of
author Gnomovision comes
with
ABSOLUTELY NO
WARRANTY; for details type
'show
w'.
This is free
software,
and you are
welcome to
redistribute it under certain
conditions;
type
'show c'
for
details.
The hypothetical
commands 'show w'
and
'show
c'
should show
the appropriate
parts of the General
Public
License.
Of course,
the
commands you
use
may be called something other than
'show
w' and
'show c';
they could even
be
mouse-clicks or menu
items--whatever suits your
program.
You should
also get your
employer
(if you work
as
a
programmer) or your
school,
if any, to
sign a
"copyright disclaimer" for the
program
,
if necessary.
Here is
a sample; alter the
names:
Yoyodyne, Inc.,
hereby disclaims
all copyright
interest in the program 'Gnomovision' (which makes
passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
<Signature
of
TyCoon>,
1 April1989
TyCoon,
President of Vice
12
This General Public License does not permit
incorporating
your program
into
proprietary
programs. If
your program
is
a
subroutine
library,
you
may consider
it more useful to permit linking
proprietary applications
with
the
library.
If
this
is
what you want to do, use the GNU
Library
General
Public License
instead of
this
License.
GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 2.1, February 1999
Copyright (C) 1991, 1999 Free
Software
Foundation,
Inc. 51 Franklin
Street,
Fifth Floor,
Boston,
MA
02110-1301, USA. Everyone is permitted to
copy
and
distribute
verbatim
copies of
this license document,
but changing it
is
not
allowed.
[This is the first
released
version of the
Lesser
GPL.
It also counts
as
the successor of the GNU
Library
Public
License,
version
2, hence the
version
number
2.1.]
Preamble
The licenses for most
software are
designed to
take away your freedom to share and
change
it.
By
contrast,
the GNU
General
Public Licenses
are
intended to
guarantee
your freedom to
share and
change free
software-to make
sure the
software
is
free for
all
its
users.
This
license, the
Lesser General Public License,
applies
to
some
specially
designated software
packages-typically libraries--of the Free
Software
Foundation and
other authors
who decide
to
use
it.
You
can use it
too,
but
we
suggest you first think
carefully about
whether
this license or the
ordinary
General Public License is the better
strategy
to use in
any particular
case,
based on the explanations
below.
When we
speak of
free
software, we are referring
to
freedom of
use,
not price. Our General
Public
Licenses
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distribute
copies of free
software (and
charge for this
service
if you wish); that you receive
source code
or can get it
if you want
it;
that
you
can
change the
software
and
use pieces
of
it in
new
free
programs;
and that
you
are
informed
that
you
can
do
these
things.
To
protect your
rights, we
need
to make restrictions
that
forbid
distributors
to
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ask
you
to surrender these rights. These restrictions
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for
you if you
distribute copies
of
the library or if you
modify
it.
For
example,
if
you distribute copies
of the
library,
whether gratis
or
for a
fee,
you
must
give the
recipients all
the
rights that we gave
you.
You
must make sure
that
they,
too,
receive or can get
the
source
code. If you link
other code
with
the
library, you must
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complete
object
files to
the
recipients,
so
that they
can
relink them
with
the library after making
changes
to the
library
and
recompiling it. And
you must
show them these terms
so
they know
their
rights.
We
protect
your rights with
a
two-step
method:
(1)
we
copyright the library,
and
(2) we
offer you
this
license, which
gives
you legal permission
to copy,
distribute and/or modify the
library.
To
protect each
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want to
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for
the
free library.
Also,
if the library
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ified
by
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and
passed
on,
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recipients
should know that
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have
is
not
the original
version,
so
that the
original
author's
reputation
will not
be
affected by problems
that
might
be introduced
by
others.
Finally,
software
patents pose
a constant
threat
to
the
existence
of
any
free
program. We
wish to
make
sure
that
a
company
cannot effectively restrict the
users
of
a
free
program by
obtaining
a restrictive
license
from
a
patent
holder.
Therefore, we
insist that
any patent
license obtained
for
a version of
the
library
must be
consistent
with the full freedom
of use
specified in
this
license.
Most
GNU software, including
some libraries,
is
covered by
the
ordinary
GNU General
Public
License.
This
license,
the
GNU Lesser
General Public
License,
applies
to
certain
designated libraries, and
is quite
different
from the
ordinary
General
Public License.
We use this
license for
certain
libraries
in
order
to
permit linking those
libraries into
non-free
programs.
When a
program is
linked
with
a library,
whether
statically or using
a shared library, the
combination
of the two is
legally
speaking a
combined
work,
a
derivative
of
the
original library.
The
ordinary
General
Public
License therefo
re permits such
linking
only
if
the entire combination
fits its
criteria
of
freedom.
The Lesser General
Public License
permits
more
lax
criteria
for linking
other code with
the
library.
We
call
this license the
"Lesser"
General
Public
License because it does
Less
to protect
the
user's
freedom
than
the
ordinary
General
Public License.
It
also
provides other
free software developers
Less
of an
advantage
over
competing
non-free
programs.
These disadvantages are
the
reason
we
use
the
ordinary
General Public
License
for
many
libraries.
However,
the
Lesser
license
provides
advantages
in
certain special circumstances.
For
example, on rare occasions,
there
may be
a
special
need to
encourage the widest possible use
of a certain
library, so
that
it
becomes
a
de-facto
standard.
To
achieve
this,
non-free
programs
must
be
allowed
to use the library.
A more
frequent
case
is
that a
free library does
the
same
job as widely
used
non-free
libraries. In
this
case,
there
is little to
gain
by limiting the
free
library
to free
software
only, so
we
use the Lesser
General Public
License.
In
other
cases,
permission
to
use a
particular library
in
non-free
programs
enables a greater
number
of
people to use
a
large
body of
free
software.
For
example,
permission to use the
GNU
C
Library
in
non-free
programs
enables
many more
people
to
use
the
whole GNU
operating
system,
as well
as
its
variant,
the
GNU/Linux
operating
system.
Although
the
Lesser
General
Public License
is
Less
protective of
the
users'
freedom, it
does
ensure
that
the
user
of
a
program that
is linked
with
the
Library
has the freedom
and
the
wherewithal
to run that
program
using
a modified version
of
the
Library.
The
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and conditions for
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distribution
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modification
follow.
Pay
close
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to
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"work
based
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that
uses
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library".
The
former
contains code derived
fro
m
the
library,
whereas the
latter
must
be combined
with the
library
in
order
to
run.
GNU LESSER GENERAL
PUBLIC
LICENSE TERMS
AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION
AND MODIFICATION
0.
This
License Agreement applies to
any
software
library or other program
which
contains a
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placed
by
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holder
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party
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"this
License").
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"you".
A
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nctions
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Activities
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1.
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Library's complete
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keep
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