1.1 --- a/data/dictionary.xml Fri Aug 16 16:02:38 2013 +0200
1.2 +++ b/data/dictionary.xml Fri Aug 16 16:16:25 2013 +0200
1.3 @@ -1465,24 +1465,48 @@
1.4 </concept>
1.5 <concept>
1.6 <term abbreviation="GNU" completeForm="GNU's Not Unix!" language="en"/>
1.7 - <explanation language="en"><text></text></explanation>
1.8 + <explanation language="en">
1.9 + <text>
1.10 + a Unix-like operating system that is free software and is upward-compatible with Unix;
1.11 + the GNU Project was initially announced in September 1983 by Richard Stallman;
1.12 + nowadays is mostly used in combination with Linux kernel and called GNU/Linux
1.13 + </text>
1.14 + </explanation>
1.15 <tag>computer</tag>
1.16 </concept>
1.17 <concept>
1.18 <term abbreviation="GNU GPL" completeForm="GNU General Public License" language="en"/>
1.19 <term abbreviation="GPL" completeForm="General Public License" language="en"/>
1.20 - <explanation language="en"><text></text></explanation>
1.21 + <explanation language="en">
1.22 + <text>
1.23 + a free software and copyleft license which is used by many free software packages
1.24 + </text>
1.25 + </explanation>
1.26 <tag>computer</tag>
1.27 </concept>
1.28 <concept>
1.29 <term abbreviation="GNU FDL" completeForm="GNU Free Documentation License" language="en"/>
1.30 <term abbreviation="FDL" completeForm="Free Documentation License" language="en"/>
1.31 - <explanation language="en"><text></text></explanation>
1.32 + <explanation language="en">
1.33 + <text>
1.34 + whereas GNU GPL is free and copyleft license for software,
1.35 + the GNU FDL is similar license designed for documentaion – books, articles, drawings etc.
1.36 + </text>
1.37 + </explanation>
1.38 <tag>computer</tag>
1.39 </concept>
1.40 <concept>
1.41 <term abbreviation="FS" completeForm="free software" language="en"/>
1.42 - <explanation language="en"><text></text></explanation>
1.43 + <explanation language="en">
1.44 + <text>
1.45 + a category of software which respects user's freedoms – user of such software has the four essential freedoms:
1.46 + 0) The freedom to run the program, for any purpose.
1.47 + 1) The freedom to study how the program works, and change it so it does your computing as you wish. Access to the source code is a precondition for this.
1.48 + 2) The freedom to redistribute copies so you can help your neighbor.
1.49 + 3) The freedom to distribute copies of your modified versions to others. By doing this you can give the whole community a chance to benefit from your changes. Access to the source code is a precondition for this.;
1.50 + the term „Free software“ was defined by Richard Stallman
1.51 + </text>
1.52 + </explanation>
1.53 <tag>computer</tag>
1.54 </concept>
1.55 <concept>