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Showing content with the highest reputation on 12/06/2011 in all areas

  1. Without wishing to stray too far off topic, you should take a look at a utility called Plop Boot. It contains an ISO file that can be used to boot a virtual machine, that can then be used to boot from a USB stick. It works on VM Workstation, which does not support booting from a USB drive. I don't think it will help you get an RT application running, but I find it useful for other occasions.
    1 point
  2. As long as it is for your own use, there is nothing that forces you to do any licensing related stuff (this is about OpenG, or other Open Source, use of commercial software needs of course to obey their licensing requirements even for personal use). But once you distribute your app, commercial or not, you need to comply with the Open Source licensing requests and this means you need to add some credit information for compiled apps or leave the source code intact in the distribution. Chances that a coworker is going to fuss about this if you let him use the compiled app are rather small, but you are strictly speaking in violation of the OpenG license if you don't add some credit information somewhere in your compiled app. If however you distribute the whole thing in source, that already fulfills the license requirement.
    1 point
  3. Along the lines of what Ben suggested, I believe you can simply add a second plot with x=0 for all y values and simply use that plot as the fill baseline for the first plot. I'd do the similar thing for the horizontal rendering (y=0 for all x) so you do not have to futz with the fill baseline via property nodes and can always fill to plot 1.
    1 point
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