A friend and I have been discussing the LGPL as it might apply to an embedded product. We desire to link in an LGPL library to some proprietary code such that we replace the current proprietary protocol with an open one. It would appear that according to provision 6(a), we need only distribute the source code to the LGPL library and the object file to the proprietary code (before linking). The other provisions would be that the license is altered to allow both modification and reverse engineering of the end product, the copyright notice is distributed with the project, and a copy of the LGPL is included with the product. Have I understood the terms properly? Another question: If the embedded product provides no manner of updating the product (beyond replacing a ROM), would it still be legal to use LGPL code? It states that our terms must allow for modification, but it does not specify that it be technically feasible. Thank you in advance for your advice. -- Voltage Spike ,,, (. .) --ooO-(_)-Ooo--