If you have ImageMagick (or one of the derived packages) installed, the identify
command might cover a lot of the bases. For example, picking a random image on my hard drive, it reports back PNG 740x555 740x555+0+0 8-bit sRGB 1007460B
.
I work on things. You’ll find a lot of the results at my website.
If you have ImageMagick (or one of the derived packages) installed, the identify
command might cover a lot of the bases. For example, picking a random image on my hard drive, it reports back PNG 740x555 740x555+0+0 8-bit sRGB 1007460B
.
While I don’t want to even pretend to tell you how to make your decisions, you actually provide your own argument for why non-commercial licenses fail: Just like you can cordon off AGPL code and not let it touch your main project, big corporations are more than happy to juggle accounting tricks to make a certain piece of a project look “non-commercial,” if it’ll make them money.
In my opinion, it’d be better to force them (by the terms of the license) to contribute changes back upstream, so that if you disapprove of their use, you have the ability to publicly shame them as it happens.
While it doesn’t have the features itself, you might want to check the Watchy page, because it has a clean comparison table of what I imagine are the major contenders. Bangle looks like the only one with GPS, out of them.
That design looks more difficult to work with than the half-gallon and quart containers that we get in most of the United States (those are waxy cardboard rectangles with square bases and peaked tops), but a lot of people have used them for molds to make block-y things, whether literal blocks, candles, or something else. The waxy coating on the inside made everything easy to remove.
Those, though? As long as there’s no smell left, I might suggest just using them for storage. They look well-made for anything from oil to beans, since they’re not going to let air or light in.