Let me summarize this thread for good: - A developer thinking of extending Qt with a charts add-on found out in few hours that there are three projects working in that direction, in different stages of development, with different licensing models and developed by different stakeholders (none of them being Nokia).
- That developer had a concern about the future of Qt in 2015, and the Nokia involvement. In few hours he got answers from three Nokia employees working full time in Qt and showing confidence in the strategic commitment of their employer in Qt. All in all it looks like a good response to his question. Thank you Qt community! This is the Qt Project. Here open source developers meet to collaborate pushing Qt forward. It is everybody's interest to have a powerful Qt and a vivid ecosystem rocking in 2015 - and a decade later. All of us here have to "assure there is food in the table" (quoting Harri) and I bet all of us are doing our best granting that for today and for the future. It is not really useful pushing the people here with a @nokia.com address (all of us betting our food on Qt) for anything related with Nokia business. By the way this is a good advice applicable to any employee of any corporation in any OSS project. With the best of intentions I have put together http://qt-project.org/wiki/Nokia-and-Qt - it's a wiki page and you are invited to improve it. The Qt Project has an excellent level of discussion and collaboration based on people and the work they do. Keeping this level and keeping the morale high is a collective task. Like in any open source project, you are encouraged to contribute your part. -- Quim _______________________________________________ Interest mailing list Interest@qt-project.org http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest