On Mon, Jul 22, 2013 at 09:31:08AM +1000, Andrew Pam wrote:
> On 22/07/13 03:15, Adam Bolte wrote:
> >I wouldn't define music or video as software either, for the same
> >reasons - even though these are commonly distributed on CD or DVD.
> 
> People do define music and video as "software", though:
> 
> "Software means /computer instructions or data/. Anything that can
> be stored electronically is software, in contrast to storage devices
> and display devices which are called hardware."
> http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/S/software.html

> "soft.ware noun
> 2.anything that is not hardware but is used with hardware,
> especially audiovisual materials, as film, tapes, records, etc.: a
> studio fully equipped but lacking software.
> 3.Television Slang. prepackaged materials, as movies or reruns, used
> to fill out the major part of a station's program schedule."
> http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/software?s=t
> 
> "software n 2. (Electronics) video cassettes and discs for use with
> a particular video system (Collins English Dictionary)
> software n 2. any material requiring the use of mechanical or
> electrical equipment, esp. audiovisual material such as film, tapes,
> or records. (Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary)"
> http://www.thefreedictionary.com/software
> 
> "Definition of SOFTWARE b: materials for use with audiovisual equipment"
> http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/software

The most trustworthy source of the above links would appear to be
Webster, but that's also easily the most vague. Let's have a look at
the dictionaries actually distributed by the Debian project as
packages:


From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:

  software
      n 1: (computer science) written programs or procedures or rules
           and associated documentation pertaining to the operation of
           a computer system and that are stored in read/write memory;
           "the market for software is expected to expand" [syn:
           {software}, {software program}, {computer software},
           {software system}, {software package}, {package}] [ant:
           {computer hardware}, {hardware}]


From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (18 May 2012) [foldoc]:

  software
  computer program
  program

  ...
    
     Software includes both {source code} written by humans and
     executable {machine code} produced by {assemblers} or
     {compilers}.  It does not usually include the data processed
     by programs unless this is in a format such as {multimedia}
     which depends on the use of computers for its presentation.
     This distinction becomes unclear in cases such as {spread
     sheets} which can contain both instructions (formulae and
     {macros}) and data.  There are also various intermediate
     compiled or {semi-compiled}, forms of software such as
     {library} files and {byte-code}.
  
     Some claim that {documentation} (both paper and electronic) is
     also software.  Others go further and define software to be
     programs plus documentation though this does not correspond
     with common usage.



> >Fonts are definitely not a software program, although some
> >software and document files such as PDFs may optionally include
> >them.
> 
> That depends on the format.  Some fonts are instructions to a font
> renderer, and therefore definitely are a software program in a
> defined font language.

I'm not familiar enough with font renderers, so if true then you make
a fair point.

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