Wow, I was surprised to find .jpg files in the zip and it's a shame that the border can't be removed, but this is an impressive icon collection nonetheless. I saw that the 'fire' icon was a little weird and found it via google search instantly, but since it was from a US-Government website, it can be used under public domain terms :)
If you have a layered file with these icons, please, please upload it. they would be much more useful without the gradient borders!
Also... I think all these threads I posted lately on the editor's forum.. they were probably intended for the feedback forum. Move if you think that makes sense & makes it cleaner please.
You can use as many licensees on your own works as you like. Using one license does not remove your own rights to the art, but it gives permission to others.
All art here can be used in *commercial* art.
But there are various restrictions, depending on lincense and for example GPL and BY-SA might require the game to be open source.or that if the image is changed in any way, it and the changes have to be pointed out and everyone who owns a copy with the art can use it just as the game developer did with your art..
I wrote 'or' because there has not yet been a case where a judge decided whether the whole game counts as a 'derivate work' or if only the image does. However, since there is a chance, that the whole game might count as a derivate work and thus would have to be released under GPL/By-Sa, commercial game developers are most likely avoiding art under these licenses.
> I'd venture to say that it's bigger than someone would want if they were going to put it into a computer game. Just downscale it to wallpaper resolution (or twice that or whatever) and license the downscaled version CC-BY-SA, and keep the NC license on the original.
What if I want a small piece of the map? Then the full size would be of interest.
Just a guess, but I suppose it would mean that the board would have to be BY-SA as well, which means that you could scan/photograph it and re-distribute under BY-SA.
Wow, I was surprised to find .jpg files in the zip and it's a shame that the border can't be removed, but this is an impressive icon collection nonetheless. I saw that the 'fire' icon was a little weird and found it via google search instantly, but since it was from a US-Government website, it can be used under public domain terms :)
If you have a layered file with these icons, please, please upload it. they would be much more useful without the gradient borders!
[URL=http://img9.imageshack.us/i/solutionx.png/][IMG]http://img9.imageshack.u...
Vimeo seems to have found a kind of nice solution for the "didn't use comma in tags" problem. It should have a JS-"add commas" button though :) (replace " " with ", ")
Also... I think all these threads I posted lately on the editor's forum.. they were probably intended for the feedback forum. Move if you think that makes sense & makes it cleaner please.
Very nice :) less midi-ishness more cuteness!
Did you modify the .midi file in the process? Or was this just a replacement of instuments?
You can use as many licensees on your own works as you like. Using one license does not remove your own rights to the art, but it gives permission to others.
All art here can be used in *commercial* art.
But there are various restrictions, depending on lincense and for example GPL and BY-SA might require the game to be open source.or that if the image is changed in any way, it and the changes have to be pointed out and everyone who owns a copy with the art can use it just as the game developer did with your art..
I wrote 'or' because there has not yet been a case where a judge decided whether the whole game counts as a 'derivate work' or if only the image does. However, since there is a chance, that the whole game might count as a derivate work and thus would have to be released under GPL/By-Sa, commercial game developers are most likely avoiding art under these licenses.
> I'd venture to say that it's bigger than someone would want if they were going to put it into a computer game. Just downscale it to wallpaper resolution (or twice that or whatever) and license the downscaled version CC-BY-SA, and keep the NC license on the original.
What if I want a small piece of the map? Then the full size would be of interest.
> how does CC-BY-SA get invoked?
Just a guess, but I suppose it would mean that the board would have to be BY-SA as well, which means that you could scan/photograph it and re-distribute under BY-SA.
I guess I just wasn't looking for that information. Perhaps I was sure that the music is harvested from mod archives on the web. :)
I *adore* the music in this game! Thanks for pasting it! I didn't know it was freely licensed :)
Wow, awesome! With sources! W00t!
I attached a .7z of the sources, so they're easier to get :)
Hilarious :D
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