Add text about copyleft and GPL. Remove \centering.

This commit is contained in:
Sergio Durigan Junior 2019-05-09 17:14:06 -04:00
parent 22948b3d10
commit c60039bb63
1 changed files with 11 additions and 4 deletions

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@ -79,6 +79,17 @@
say it is \textbf{non-free}.
\end{frame}
\begin{frame}{What's Free Software?$^3$}
The \textbf{copyleft} concept was the smartest hack that Stallman
has created. It exploits how the copyright works, and turns it back
against itself.
\newline
\newline
The \textbf{GNU General Public License}, or \textbf{GPL}, is the
tool with which we guarantee that the software freedom will
be respected by everyone.
\end{frame}
\section{The G from GNU}
\begin{frame}{The \texttt{G} from \texttt{GNU}}
\begin{itemize}
@ -100,7 +111,6 @@
\end{frame}
\begin{frame}{The \texttt{G} from \texttt{GNU}$^2$}
\centering
But of course, we are not in a contest. I choose to call the system
\textbf{GNU/Linux} not only because I think it is the right thing to
do, but mainly to \textbf{raise awareness}.
@ -122,7 +132,6 @@
\section{All that goes upstream...}
\begin{frame}{All that goes upstream...}
\centering
\textbf{Upstream} is the name we give to the actual Free Software
projects that develop the programs. For example, Linux,
LibreOffice, GIMP, GDB, GTK.
@ -163,7 +172,6 @@
\end{frame}
\begin{frame}{All that goes upstream...$^4$}
\centering
The so-called \textbf{forges} are very popular nowadays.
\textbf{GitHub} and \textbf{GitLab} are widely used; they provide an
integrated bug tracking system, but don't provide a mailing list
@ -182,7 +190,6 @@
\section{... Must come downstream}
\begin{frame}{... Must come downstream}
\centering
\textbf{Downstream} is the name we give to the projects that
\emph{package} the upstream projects. For example, Fedora, RHEL,
Debian, Ubuntu. We also call them \textbf{distributions} (or