Owner's Manual
Table Of Contents
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libstdc++.
libiconv. Dnsmasq
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GNU
GENERAL
PUBLIC
LICENSE,
GNU
LESSER
GENERAL
PUBLIC
LICENSE
0)~3(:~~c~G*9o
The software package installed in this
product
includes software
licensed
to
TEAC
Corporatiofl (hereinafter, called
"TEAC")
directly
or indirectly by third party developers.
Please
be
sure
to
read this
notice regarding such software.
Notice about software
covered
by
the
GNU
Gener-
al
Public
License
or
Lesser
General
Public
License
This
product
includes
the
following
software
to
which
the
GNU
General Public License
("GPL")
or
GNU
Lesser
General Public License
("LGPL:')
applies.
We
announce that, under
the
terms
of
the accompanying
GPL
or
LGPL,
customers have
the
right
to
receive, modify, and redistribute
these source codes
of
the
software.
List
of packages
linux,
libgcc,
libiconv,
uCiibc,
libstdc++,
Dnsmasq
busy box
libmms
To
request
the
source codes, please
access
the following
URL
and
fill
in
the
registration form.
http://www.teac.co.jp/support/opensource/index.html
Please
note
that
we
are
unable
to
answer any inquiries or questions
about the contents
of
the
source codes.
Below
is
the original text
of
the
GPL
and
LGPL.
To
request
the
source codes, please
access
the following
URL
and
fill
in
the registration form.
D01274700A
http://www.teac.co.jp/support/opensource/index.html
Please
note that we
are
unable
to
answer any inquiries or questions
about the contents
of
the source codes.
Below
is
the original text
of
the
GPL
and
LGPL.
GNU
LESSER
GENERAL
PUBLIC
LICENSE
Version 2.1, February
1999
Copyright
(C)
1991,
1999
Free
Software Foundation,
Inc.
59
Temple
Place,
Suite
330,
Boston, MA 02111-1307
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
are
designed
to
make sure that you have the freedom to 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
deny you
these rights or to
ask
you
to
surrender these rights.
These
restrictions translate
to
certain
responsibilities 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
provide 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 distributor, we want
to
make
it
very clear that there
is
no
warranty for the free library.
Also,
if
the library
is
modified by someone
else
and
passed
on, the recipients should know that what they 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 freedorn
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
sp.eaking
a combined work, a derivative
of
the original
library. The ordinary General Public License therefore 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.
1