[SPG_Active_Members] CHM History of Lisp web site noted on Hacker
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Paul McJones
paul at mcjones.org
Fri Nov 13 09:51:40 PST 2015
That’s an interesting theory that deserves to be tested. Note that as volunteers, we can’t commit CHM to create exhibits (or to accept the donated software, for that matter (although in practice they are of course interested in a wide range of historic software). So you could offer to do the curation for a company, including, say, creating a public web site that they would publish. At CHM, you could offer to write a “From the Collection" post for the @CHM blog (http://www.computerhistory.org/atchm/category/from-the-collection/), which CHM generally welcomes.
There are certainly lots of cases where your approach doesn’t work, such as when the ownership of the software has passed through multiple hands and the current owner doesn’t want to be bothered (but won’t necessarily even go so far as to sign a “quitclaim”).
But by all means give it a try.
Paul
> On Nov 13, 2015, at 4:39 AM, Larry Masinter <masinter at adobe.com> wrote:
>
> I've been thinking how I would go about trying to sell to management the "donation" of historical software at Adobe but also other companies, and I keep coming back to the idea that, instead of asking management to "donate", that instead you're really offering to management of a service: to curate and exhibit historically significant software to Museum quality.
>
> You might want to offer a discount ("free") for some especially-significant software, but still: you're doing work and the "donation" really goes the other way.
>
> Larry
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