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Hi @julientaq, thanks for reaching out. We're fans of pagedjs and have our eyes on it for future Quire development! As to you question, our plan is to release Quire later this year under a gnu public license v3. Until then our current license terms are here. Assuming you are working on behalf of the client and won't be building a new tool with Quire in it that would then be distributed beyond that client, I think you're covered and I'd encourage you to move ahead. If though you or your client need a more explicit license to cover your needs, please reach out to us at quire@getty.edu and we'd be happy to work with you on something. And yes, we're experimenting with an 11ty version of Quire now and it's looking pretty good. Really nice to have your early vote of confidence and enthusiasm! You may hear more from us on that soon. :) |
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Hi folks!
I work on Pagedjs, an open source js lib to make books (and stuff that can be printed) from of HTLM. We got a proposition from a client to setup a single source publishing setup, and we’re trying to see if Quire can be part of a setup.
The problem is that, even if the code is open, the licence don’t really give any clear answers about that.
What licence is quire based on?
Also, i found this experiment/eleventy branch (which is very exciting as eleventy is quite amazing), so shout out, we’d be happy to contribute on that bit :-)
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