Nikos,
Actually that is incorrect. You can use commercial if you previously used Open 
Source but it’s on a case by case basis and you need to get approval from the 
Qt company. 

Sent from my iPhone
Regards,
Melinda Seifert 
Director of the Americas
melinda.seif...@qt.io
(O) 617-377-7918
(C) 617-414-4479
www.qt.io


> On Oct 7, 2019, at 6:42 PM, Nikos Chantziaras <rea...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Note that there is (or was?) a restriction in the commercial license. You 
> are not allowed to use commercial Qt if you previously uses open source Qt in 
> the project. So you might not even be allowed to switch from open source to 
> commercial.
> 
> Not sure if that (very) weird term has been removed now or not, but it was 
> there a while ago.
> 
> 
>> On 07/10/2019 18:57, Colin Worth wrote:
>> Thanks Giuseppe, Jerome, and Uwe. All of this makes sense to me. I will have 
>> to talk to our software and management people and decide what our best route 
>> is. Incidentally, we will also need FDA certification for this product. This 
>> is all a bit preliminary. The product is still in development. I’m in touch 
>> with the Qt office in Boston as well.
>> Cheers,
>> Colin
>>>> On Oct 7, 2019, at 1:55 AM, Uwe Rathmann <uwe.rathm...@tigertal.de> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> On 10/6/19 12:03 PM, Giuseppe D'Angelo via Interest wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> Hey, I linked it two emails ago :-)
>>> 
>>> Ah yes, sorry.
>>> 
>>> My response was initially more explicit about FUD, before I decided, that 
>>> it is not worth the effort.
>>> 
>>> Uwe
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