← Back to context Comment by yunohn 5 days ago I’ve been thinking about ways to reuse Vercel’s AI SDK, so this is a great one - thanks for sharing! 3 comments yunohn Reply yujonglee 5 days ago Also you might find this interesting:https://github.com/fastrepl/hyprnote/blob/main/packages/util.... yunohn 5 days ago Super neat! You’ve made an impressive amount of cool specialized crates - have you considered making them generally usable to the wider community and licensing them under LGPL/MIT instead of GPL? yujonglee 5 days ago we def considered it. our line of thinking is start with more restrictive license, and later switch to MIT or something once we figure things out :)
yujonglee 5 days ago Also you might find this interesting:https://github.com/fastrepl/hyprnote/blob/main/packages/util.... yunohn 5 days ago Super neat! You’ve made an impressive amount of cool specialized crates - have you considered making them generally usable to the wider community and licensing them under LGPL/MIT instead of GPL? yujonglee 5 days ago we def considered it. our line of thinking is start with more restrictive license, and later switch to MIT or something once we figure things out :)
yunohn 5 days ago Super neat! You’ve made an impressive amount of cool specialized crates - have you considered making them generally usable to the wider community and licensing them under LGPL/MIT instead of GPL? yujonglee 5 days ago we def considered it. our line of thinking is start with more restrictive license, and later switch to MIT or something once we figure things out :)
yujonglee 5 days ago we def considered it. our line of thinking is start with more restrictive license, and later switch to MIT or something once we figure things out :)
Also you might find this interesting:
https://github.com/fastrepl/hyprnote/blob/main/packages/util....
Super neat! You’ve made an impressive amount of cool specialized crates - have you considered making them generally usable to the wider community and licensing them under LGPL/MIT instead of GPL?
we def considered it. our line of thinking is start with more restrictive license, and later switch to MIT or something once we figure things out :)