Home > Dell > Printer > DELL V505 User Manual

DELL V505 User Manual

    Download as PDF Print this page Share this page

    Have a look at the manual DELL V505 User Manual online for free. It’s possible to download the document as PDF or print. UserManuals.tech offer 327 Dell manuals and user’s guides for free. Share the user manual or guide on Facebook, Twitter or Google+.

    							13. Click   Close .
    Turning on Fax Blocking
    Using the Operator Panel
    1.  From the main menu,  use the left  and  right   Arrow buttons   to  scroll to   FAX,  and  then  press  the  Select button 
    .
    2 .  From the  Enter  Fax Number  display, press  the Select button 
    .
    3 .  From the Fax  menu,  use the left  and  right   Arrow buttons 
      to  scroll to   Fax Setup,  and  then  press  the  Select
    button 
    .
    4 .  Use  the left  and  right   Arrow buttons 
      to  scroll to   Fax Blocking ,  and  then  press  the  Select button .
    5 .  Use  the left  and  right   Arrow buttons 
      to  choose  Turn On/Off ,  and  then  press  the  Select button .
    6 .  Use  the left  and  right   Arrow buttons 
      to  choose  On,  and  then  press  the  Select button .
    If  the printer detects a  fax from  one  of the numbers on the Blocked Fax  List,  the transmission is disconnected.
    Using Your Computer
    1 .  Turn on your  computer  and  printer, and  make  sure  they are connected.
    2 .  Make sure  your  printer is properly  set  up  to  send and  receive  faxes.  For  more  information, see  Setting  Up  the Printer
    With External Devices.
    3 .  In Windows Vista :
    a .  Click  
    ® All Programs .
    b .  Click   Dell  Printers .
    c .  Click   Dell  V505 .
    In Windows XP or Windows 2000 :
    Click   Start ® Programs  or All Programs ® Dell  Printers ® Dell  V505 .
    4 .  Select  Dell  Fax Setup Utility .
    The   Dell  Fax Setup Wizard  Query  dialog  box opens.
    5 .  Click   No.
    The   Dell  Fax Setup Utility  dialog  box opens.
    6 .  Click  the  Ringing and Answering  tab.
    7 .  Click   Manage  Blocked Faxes .
    The   Manage  Blocked Faxes  dialog  box opens.
     
    						
    							8.  Select  Enable  fax  blocking .
    9 .  Click   OK to  return  to  the Ringing  and  Answering tab.
    10 . Click   OK.
    A  confirmation dialog  box opens.
    11 . Click   OK to  overwrite the fax settings on your  printer.
    A  dialog  box opens.
    12 . Click   Yes.
    13 . Click   Close .
    Blocking Faxes Without Caller ID
    Using the Operator Panel
    1.  From the main menu,  use the left  and  right   Arrow buttons   to  scroll to   FAX,  and  press  the  Select  button.
    2 .  From the  Enter  Fax Number  display, press  the Select 
     button.
    3 .  Use  the left  and  right   Arrow buttons 
      to  scroll to   Fax Setup,  and  press  the  Select  button.
    4 .  Use  the left  and  right   Arrow buttons 
      to  scroll to   Fax Blocking ,  and  press  the  Select  button.
    5 .  Use  the left  and  right   Arrow buttons 
      to  scroll to   Block  No- ID ,  and  press  the  Select  button.
    6 .  Use  the left  and  right   Arrow buttons 
      to  scroll to   On,  and  press  the  Select  button.
    If  the printer detects a  fax from  a  machine without  Caller ID, the transmission is disconnected.
    Using Your Computer
    1 .  Turn on your  computer  and  printer, and  make  sure  they are connected.
    2 .  Make sure  your  printer is properly  set  up  to  send and  receive  faxes.  For  more  information, see  Setting  Up  the Printer
    With External Devices.
    3 .  In Windows Vista:
    a.  Click  
    ® Programs .
    b .  Click   Dell  Printers .
    c .  Click   Dell  V505 .
    In Windows XP or Windows 2000:
    Click   Start ® Programs  or All Programs ® Dell  Printers ® Dell  V505 .
    4 .  Select  Dell  Fax Setup Utility .
     
    						
    							The  Dell  Fax Setup Wizard  Query  dialog  box opens.
    5 .  Click   No.
    The   Dell  Fax Setup Utility  dialog  box opens.
    6 .  Click  the  Ringing and Answering  tab.
    7 .  Click   Manage  Blocked Faxes .
    The   Manage  Blocked Faxes  dialog  box opens.
    8 .  Select  Always  block faxes  from senders  missing  a  valid Caller ID .
    9 .  Click   OK to  return  to  the Ringing  and  Answering tab.
    10 . Click   OK.
    A  confirmation dialog  box opens.
    11 . Click   OK to  overwrite the fax settings on your  printer.
    A  dialog  box opens.
    12 . Click   Yes.
    13 . Click   Close .
    Creating Fax Activity Report
    Using  the Operator Panel
    1.  From the main menu,  use the left  and  right   Arrow buttons   to  scroll to   FAX,  and  then  press  the  Select button 
    .
    2 .  From the  Enter  Fax Number  display, press  the Select button 
    .
    3 .  From the main menu,  use the left  and  right   Arrow buttons 
      to  scroll to   Fax Setup,  and  then  press  the  Select
    button 
    .
    4 .  From the main menu,  use the left  and  right   Arrow buttons 
      to  scroll to   Reports,  and  then  press  the  Select
    button 
    .
    5 .  From the  Reports menu,  you can  view  or print  your  fax activity.
    Using  the Computer
    1.  In Windows Vista :
     
    						
    							a.  Click  ® Programs .
    b.  Click   Dell  Printers .
    c .  Click   Dell  V505 .
    In Windows XP and  Windows 2000:
    Click   Start ® Programs  or All Programs ® Dell  Printers ® Dell  V505 .
    2 .  Click   Dell  Fax Solutions .
    The   Dell  Fax Solutions Software  dialog  box opens.
    3 .  Click   Print Activity  Report .
    4 .  From the  Display drop -down  menu,  select which faxes you would like to  print  a  report.
    5 .  Select a  date range for your  report.
    6 .  Click  the  Print icon in the upper-left  corner of the dialog  box to  print  the fax report.
     
    						
    							Licensing Notice
      BSD License  and  Warranty statements
      GNU  License
      Microsoft Corporation Notices
    The  printer resident software contains:
    Software developed and  copyrighted by Dell and/or  third  parties
    Dell modified software licensed under the provisions of the GNU  General Public  License  version 2 and  the GNU  Lesser
    General Public  License  version 2.1
    Software licensed under the BSD license and  warranty statements
    Software based in part on the work  of the Independent JPEG Group.
    The  Dell modified GNU  licensed software is free software;  you can  redistribute  it  and/or  modify  it  under the terms of the
    licenses  referenced above. These licenses  do not provide you any rights to  the Dell- or third -party-copyrighted software in this
    printer.
    Since the GNU  licensed software that  the Dell modifications are based upon is supplied  explicitly without  warranty,  use of the
    Dell modified version is similarly provided  without  warranty.  See the warranty disclaimers  in the referenced licenses  for
    additional details.
    BSD License and Warranty statements
    Copyright (c)  1991 The  Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
    Redistribution and  use in source and  binary forms, with or without  modification, are permitted provided  that  the following
    conditions  are met: 1.  Redistributions of source code  must  retain  the above  copyright  notice, this list of conditions  and  the following
    disclaimer.
    2 .  Redistributions in binary form  must  reproduce the above  copyright  notice, this list of conditions  and  the following
    disclaimer  in the documentation and/or  other materials provided  with the distribution.
    3 .  The  name of the author may not be used to  endorse  or promote products  derived from  this software without  specific
    prior  written permission.
    THIS SOFTWARE IS  PROVIDED  BY THE AUTHOR  ``AS IS AND ANY EXPRESS  OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT
    NOT LIMITED  TO,  THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES  OF  MERCHANTABILITY  AND FITNESS  FOR A  PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
    DISCLAIMED.  IN  NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR  BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT,  INDIRECT,  INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY,
    OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING,  BUT NOT LIMITED  TO,  PROCUREMENT  OF  SUBSTITUTE  GOODS OR SERVICES;
    LOSS OF  USE, DATA, OR PROFITS;  OR BUSINESS  INTERRUPTION)  HOWEVER  CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY  OF  LIABILITY,
    WHETHER IN  CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY,  OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING  IN  ANY WAY OUT
    OF  THE USE OF  THIS SOFTWARE,  EVEN  IF ADVISED OF  THE POSSIBILITY OF  SUCH  DAMAGE.
    GNU License
    GENERAL PUBLIC  LICENSE
     
    						
    							Version 2, June 1991
    Copyright (C)  1989, 1991 Free  Software Foundation,  Inc.
    59  Temple  Place, Suite 330,  Boston, MA  02111 -1307 USA
    Everyone  is permitted to  copy  and  distribute  verbatim copies of this license document,  but changing it  is not allowed.
    Preamble
    The  licenses  for most software are designed to  take  away  your  freedom  to  share  and  change  it.  By  contrast, the GNU  General
    Public  License  is intended to  guarantee  your  freedom  to  share  and  change  free software--to  make  sure  the software is free
    for all its  users. This General Public  License  applies  to  most of the Free  Software Foundations software and  to  any other
    program  whose  authors commit to  using  it.  (Some other Free  Software Foundation software is covered by the GNU  Library
    General Public  License  instead.) You  can  apply it  to  your  programs, too.
    When  we speak  of free software,  we are referring  to  freedom, not price. Our  General Public  Licenses are designed to  make
    sure  that  you have  the freedom  to  distribute  copies of free software (and charge for this service  if you wish), that  you receive
    source code  or can  get  it  if you want  it,  that  you can  change  the software or use pieces of it  in new free programs;  and  that
    you know you can  do these things.
    To protect your  rights, we need  to  make  restrictions  that  forbid anyone to  deny  you these rights or to  ask you to  surrender
    the rights. These restrictions  translate  to  certain  responsibilities  for you if you distribute  copies of the software,  or if you
    modify  it.
    For  example, if you distribute  copies of such a  program, whether  gratis  or for a  fee, you must  give  the recipients  all the rights
    that  you have. You  must  make  sure  that  they, too, receive  or can  get  the source code. And  you must  show them  these terms
    so they know their rights.
    We  protect your  rights with two steps:  (1) copyright  the software,  and  (2) offer you this license which gives  you legal
    permission  to  copy, distribute  and/or  modify  the software.
    Also, for each  authors  protection and  ours, we want  to  make  certain  that  everyone understands that  there is no warranty for
    this free software.  If  the software is modified by someone else and  passed on,  we want  its  recipients  to  know that  what  they
    have  is not the original, so that  any problems introduced by others  will not reflect on the original authors  reputations.
    Finally,  any free program  is threatened constantly  by software patents. We  wish to  avoid  the danger  that  redistributors of a
    free program  will individually  obtain patent licenses, in effect making  the program  proprietary. To prevent  this,  we have  made
    it  clear  that  any patent must  be licensed for everyones  free use or not licensed at all.
    The  precise terms and  conditions  for copying, distribution  and  modification follow.
    GNU  GENERAL PUBLIC  LICENSE
    TERMS AND CONDITIONS  FOR COPYING,  DISTRIBUTION  AND MODIFICATION
    0. This License  applies  to  any program  or other work  which contains  a  notice  placed by the copyright  holder saying it  may be
    distributed under the terms of this General Public  License. The  Program, below,  refers  to  any such program  or work, and  a
    work based on the Program means either  the Program  or any derivative work  under copyright  law: that  is to  say, a  work
    containing  the Program  or a  portion of it,  either  verbatim or with modifications and/or  translated into another language.
    (Hereinafter, translation  is included  without  limitation  in the term modification.) Each licensee  is addressed as you.
    Activities  other than  copying, distribution  and  modification are not covered by this License; they are outside its  scope. The  act
    of running  the Program  is not restricted, and  the output from  the Program  is covered only  if its  contents constitute a  work
    based on the Program  (independent  of having  been  made by running  the Program). Whether  that  is true depends on what  the
    Program  does.
    1. You  may copy  and  distribute  verbatim copies of the Programs source code  as you receive  it,  in any medium,  provided  that
    you conspicuously and  appropriately publish on each  copy  an appropriate copyright  notice  and  disclaimer  of warranty;  keep
    intact all the notices that  refer to  this License  and  to  the absence  of any warranty;  and  give  any other recipients  of the
    Program  a  copy  of this License  along with the Program.
    You  may charge a  fee for the physical act  of transferring a  copy, and  you may at your  option offer warranty protection in
    exchange for a  fee.
    2. You  may modify  your  copy  or copies of the Program  or any portion of it,  thus  forming a  work  based on the Program, and
    copy  and  distribute  such modifications or work  under the terms of Section 1 above, provided  that  you also  meet all of these
    conditions:
    a. You  must  cause the modified files  to  carry prominent notices stating  that  you changed the files  and  the date of any change.
    b. You  must  cause any work  that  you distribute  or publish,  that  in whole  or in part contains  or is derived from  the Program  or
    any part thereof, to  be licensed as a  whole  at no charge to  all third  parties  under the terms of this License.
     
    						
    							c. If  the modified program  normally reads  commands interactively  when  run, you must  cause it,  when  started running  for
    such interactive use in the most ordinary  way, to  print  or display  an announcement including an appropriate copyright  notice
    and  a  notice  that  there is no warranty (or else,  saying that  you provide a  warranty)  and  that  users  may redistribute  the
    program  under these conditions, and  telling the user  how to  view  a  copy  of this License. (Exception:  if the Program  itself is
    interactive but does  not normally print  such an announcement, your  work  based on the Program  is not required  to  print  an
    announcement.)
    These requirements  apply to  the modified work  as a  whole. If  identifiable  sections of that  work  are not derived from  the
    Program, and  can  be reasonably considered  independent and  separate  works in themselves, then  this License, and  its  terms,
    do not apply to  those  sections when  you distribute  them  as separate  works. But when  you distribute  the same  sections as
    part of a  whole  which is a  work  based on the Program, the distribution  of the whole  must  be on the terms of this License,
    whose  permissions for other licensees  extend  to  the entire  whole, and  thus  to  each  and  every part regardless of who wrote  it.
    Thus,  it  is not the intent  of this section to  claim rights or contest your  rights to  work  written entirely by you; rather,  the
    intent  is to  exercise the right  to  control the distribution  of derivative or collective works based on the Program.
    In addition, mere  aggregation  of another work  not based on the Program  with the Program  (or with a  work  based on the
    Program) on a  volume  of a  storage  or distribution  medium does  not bring the other work  under the scope of this License.
    3. You  may copy  and  distribute  the Program  (or a  work  based on it,  under Section 2)  in object  code  or executable  form  under
    the terms of Sections 1 and  2 above  provided  that  you also  do one  of the following:
    a. Accompany  it  with the complete  corresponding  machine-readable  source code, which must  be distributed under the terms
    of Sections 1 and  2 above  on a  medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
    b. Accompany  it  with a  written offer,  valid  for at least three years,  to  give  any third  party, for a  charge no more  than  your
    cost of physically performing source distribution, a  complete  machine-readable  copy  of the corresponding  source code, to  be
    distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and  2 above  on a  medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
    c. Accompany  it  with the information  you received as to  the offer to  distribute  corresponding  source code. (This alternative is
    allowed only  for noncommercial distribution  and  only  if you received the program  in object  code  or executable  form  with such
    an offer,  in accord with Subsection b above.)
    The  source code  for a  work  means the preferred form  of the work  for making  modifications to  it.  For  an executable  work,
    complete  source code  means all the source code  for all modules it  contains, plus any associated  interface definition files, plus
    the scripts  used to  control compilation  and  installation of the executable. However,  as a  special exception, the source code
    distributed need  not include anything that  is normally distributed (in  either  source or binary form) with the major components
    (compiler,  kernel, and  so on)  of the operating  system  on which the executable  runs, unless  that  component  itself
    accompanies the executable.
    If  distribution  of executable  or object  code  is made by offering  access  to  copy  from  a  designated place, then  offering
    equivalent access  to  copy  the source code  from  the same  place  counts as distribution  of the source code, even though  third
    parties  are not compelled  to  copy  the source along with the object  code.
    4. You  may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute  the Program  except as expressly provided  under this License. Any
    attempt otherwise  to  copy, modify, sublicense  or distribute  the Program  is void, and  will automatically terminate your  rights
    under this License. However,  parties  who have  received copies,  or rights, from  you under this License  will not have  their
    licenses  terminated  so long as such parties  remain  in full compliance.
    5. You  are not required  to  accept  this License, since you have  not signed  it.  However,  nothing else grants  you permission  to
    modify  or distribute  the Program  or its  derivative works. These actions are prohibited by law  if you do not accept  this License.
    Therefore, by modifying or distributing  the Program  (or any work  based on the Program), you indicate your  acceptance  of this
    License  to  do so, and  all its  terms and  conditions  for copying, distributing  or modifying the Program  or works based on it.
    6. Each time you redistribute  the Program  (or any work  based on the Program), the recipient  automatically receives a  license
    from  the original licensor  to  copy, distribute  or modify  the Program  subject to  these terms and  conditions. You  may not
    impose  any further restrictions  on the recipients exercise of the rights granted herein.  You  are not responsible  for enforcing
    compliance by third  parties  to  this License.
    7. If, as a  consequence of a  court judgment or allegation of patent infringement or for any other reason (not  limited to  patent
    issues), conditions  are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement  or otherwise) that  contradict the conditions  of this
    License, they do not excuse you from  the conditions  of this License. If  you cannot distribute  so as to  satisfy  simultaneously
    your  obligations  under this License  and  any other pertinent obligations, then  as a  consequence you may not distribute  the
    Program  at all.  For  example, if a  patent license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program  by all those  who
    receive  copies directly or indirectly  through you,  then  the only  way  you could satisfy  both  it  and  this License  would be to
    refrain entirely from  distribution  of the Program.
    If  any portion of this section is held invalid  or unenforceable  under any particular  circumstance, the balance  of the section is
    intended to  apply and  the section as a  whole  is intended to  apply in other circumstances.
    It is not the purpose  of this section to  induce  you to  infringe any patents  or other property right  claims or to  contest validity
     
    						
    							of any such claims; this section has  the sole purpose  of protecting  the integrity of the free software distribution  system, which
    is implemented by public  license practices.  Many  people have  made generous contributions to  the wide range of software
    distributed through that  system  in reliance  on consistent  application  of that  system; it  is up  to  the author/donor to  decide if
    he or she is willing  to  distribute  software through any other system  and  a  licensee  cannot impose  that  choice.
    This section is intended to  make  thoroughly  clear  what  is believed  to  be a  consequence of the rest  of this License.
    8. If  the distribution  and/or  use of the Program  is restricted  in certain  countries  either  by patents  or by copyrighted
    interfaces,  the original copyright  holder who places the Program  under this License  may add  an explicit geographical
    distribution  limitation  excluding  those  countries, so that  distribution  is permitted only  in or among  countries  not thus
    excluded. In such case,  this License  incorporates the limitation  as if written in the body  of this License.
    9. The  Free  Software Foundation may publish revised and/or  new versions  of the General Public  License  from  time to  time.
    Such new versions  will be similar  in spirit  to  the present version,  but may differ in detail  to  address new problems or
    concerns.
    Each version is given a  distinguishing  version number. If  the Program  specifies  a  version number of this License  which applies
    to  it  and  any later version, you have  the option of following the terms and  conditions  either  of that  version or of any later
    version published by the Free  Software Foundation.  If  the Program  does  not specify a  version number of this License, you may
    choose any version ever published by the Free  Software Foundation.
    10. If  you wish to  incorporate parts of the Program  into other free programs whose  distribution  conditions  are different,  write
    to  the author to  ask for permission. For  software which is copyrighted by the Free  Software Foundation,  write  to  the Free
    Software Foundation; we sometimes make  exceptions  for this.  Our  decision will be guided by the two goals of preserving the
    free status of all derivatives of our free software and  of promoting the sharing and  reuse  of software generally.
    NO WARRANTY
    11. BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS  LICENSED FREE OF  CHARGE,  THERE IS  NO WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM,  TO THE EXTENT
    PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW.  EXCEPT  WHEN OTHERWISE STATED  IN  WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR
    OTHER PARTIES  PROVIDE  THE PROGRAM AS IS WITHOUT WARRANTY OF  ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED  OR IMPLIED,
    INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED  TO,  THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES  OF  MERCHANTABILITY  AND FITNESS  FOR A  PARTICULAR
    PURPOSE.  THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE  OF  THE PROGRAM IS  WITH  YOU. SHOULD  THE
    PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE,  YOU ASSUME  THE COST OF  ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
    12. IN  NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED  BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED  TO IN  WRITING WILL  ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR
    ANY OTHER PARTY WHO  MAY MODIFY  AND/OR REDISTRIBUTE  THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE,  BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR
    DAMAGES,  INCLUDING ANY GENERAL,  SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING  OUT OF  THE USE OR
    INABILITY  TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED  TO LOSS OF  DATA  OR DATA  BEING  RENDERED
    INACCURATE  OR LOSSES  SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD  PARTIES  OR A  FAILURE OF  THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH  ANY
    OTHER PROGRAMS),  EVEN  IF SUCH  HOLDER  OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN  ADVISED OF  THE POSSIBILITY OF  SUCH  DAMAGES.
    END OF  TERMS AND CONDITIONS
    How  to  Apply These Terms to  Your  New Programs
    If  you develop a  new program, and  you want  it  to  be of the greatest possible use to  the public, the best way  to  achieve this is
    to  make  it  free software which everyone can  redistribute  and  change  under these terms.
    To do so, attach the following notices to  the program. It is safest to  attach them  to  the start  of each  source file to  most
    effectively convey the exclusion of warranty;  and  each  file should have  at least the copyright  line  and  a  pointer to  where the
    full notice  is found.
    1 April  1989
    Lexmark  International,  Inc.
    This General Public  License  does  not permit incorporating your  program  into proprietary  programs. If  your  program  is a
    subroutine  library, you may consider it  more  useful  to  permit linking proprietary  applications  with the library. If  this is what
    you want  to  do,  use the GNU  Library General Public  License  instead of this License.
    GNU  LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC  LICENSE
    Version 2.1, February 1999
    Copyright (C)  1991, 1999 Free  Software Foundation,  Inc.
    59  Temple  Place, Suite 330,  Boston, MA  02111 -1307 USA
    Everyone  is permitted to  copy  and  distribute  verbatim copies of this license document,  but changing it  is not allowed.
    [This is the first released version of the Lesser GPL. It also  counts as the successor of the GNU  Library Public  License, version
     
    						
    							2, hence the version number 2.1.]
    Preamble
    The  licenses  for most software are designed to  take  away  your  freedom  to  share  and  change  it.  By  contrast, the GNU  General
    Public  Licenses are intended to  guarantee  your  freedom  to  share  and  change  free software--to  make  sure  the software is free
    for all its  users.
    This license,  the Lesser General Public  License, applies  to  some  specially  designated software packages --typically libraries --of
    the Free  Software Foundation and  other authors who decide to  use it.  You  can  use it  too, but we suggest you first think
    carefully  about  whether  this license or the ordinary  General Public  License  is the better  strategy to  use in any particular  case,
    based on the explanations  below.
    When  we speak  of free software,  we are referring  to  freedom  of use,  not price. Our  General Public  Licenses are designed to
    make  sure  that  you have  the freedom  to  distribute  copies of free software (and charge for this service  if you wish); that  you
    receive  source code  or can  get  it  if you want  it; that  you can  change  the software and  use pieces of it  in new free programs;
    and  that  you are informed that  you can  do these things.
    To protect your  rights, we need  to  make  restrictions  that  forbid distributors to  deny  you these rights or to  ask you to
    surrender these rights. These restrictions  translate  to  certain  responsibilities  for you if you distribute  copies of the library or if
    you modify  it.
    For  example, if you distribute  copies of the library, whether  gratis  or for a  fee, you must  give  the recipients  all the rights that
    we gave you.  You  must  make  sure  that  they, too, receive  or can  get  the source code. If  you link  other code  with the library,
    you must  provide complete  object  files  to  the recipients, so that  they can  relink them  with the library after making  changes to
    the library and  recompiling it.  And  you must  show them  these terms so they know their rights.
    We  protect your  rights with a  two-step method:  (1) we copyright  the library, and  (2) we offer you this license,  which gives
    you legal permission  to  copy, distribute  and/or  modify  the library.
    To protect each  distributor, we want  to  make  it  very clear  that  there is no warranty for the free library. Also, if the library is
    modified by someone else and  passed on,  the recipients  should know that  what  they have  is not the original version,  so that
    the original authors  reputation  will not be affected by problems that  might be introduced by others.
    Finally,  software patents  pose  a  constant threat to  the existence of any free program. We  wish to  make  sure  that  a  company
    cannot effectively restrict the users  of a  free program  by obtaining a  restrictive  license from  a  patent holder.  Therefore, we
    insist that  any patent license obtained  for a  version of the library must  be consistent  with the full freedom  of use specified in
    this license.
    Most  GNU  software,  including some  libraries, is covered by the ordinary  GNU  General Public  License. This license,  the GNU
    Lesser General Public  License, applies  to  certain  designated libraries, and  is quite  different from  the ordinary  General Public
    License. We  use this license for certain  libraries  in order  to  permit linking those  libraries  into non-free programs.
    When  a  program  is linked with a  library, whether  statically  or using  a  shared library, the combination of the two is legally
    speaking a  combined  work, a  derivative of the original library. The  ordinary  General Public  License  therefore permits such
    linking only  if the entire  combination fits its  criteria  of freedom. The  Lesser General Public  License  permits more  lax criteria
    for linking other code  with the library.
    We  call  this license the Lesser General Public  License  because  it  does  Less  to  protect the users freedom  than  the ordinary
    General Public  License. It also  provides  other free software developers Less  of an advantage  over competing non-free
    programs. These disadvantages are the reason we use the ordinary  General Public  License  for many libraries. However,  the
    Lesser license provides  advantages in certain  special circumstances.
    For  example, on rare occasions,  there may be a  special need  to  encourage the widest possible use of a  certain  library, so that
    it  becomes  a  de-facto standard. To achieve this,  non-free programs must  be allowed to  use the library. A  more  frequent  case
    is that  a  free library does  the same  job as widely  used non-free libraries. In this case,  there is little to  gain by limiting the
    free library to  free software only, so we use the Lesser General Public  License.
    In other cases, permission  to  use a  particular  library in non-free programs enables  a  greater number of people to  use a  large
    body  of free software.  For  example, permission  to  use the GNU  C  Library in non-free programs enables  many more  people to
    use the whole  GNU  operating  system, as well as its  variant, the GNU/Linux operating  system.
    Although the Lesser General Public  License  is Less  protective  of the users freedom, it  does  ensure that  the user  of a  program
    that  is linked with the Library has  the freedom  and  the wherewithal to  run  that  program  using  a  modified version of the
    Library.
    The  precise terms and  conditions  for copying, distribution  and  modification follow. Pay close  attention  to  the difference
    between  a  work based on the library  and  a  work that  uses  the library. The  former contains  code  derived from  the library,
    whereas  the latter  must  be combined  with the library in order  to  run.
    GNU  LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC  LICENSE
     
    						
    							TERMS AND CONDITIONS  FOR COPYING,  DISTRIBUTION  AND MODIFICATION
    0. This License  Agreement  applies  to  any software library or other program  which contains  a  notice  placed by the copyright
    holder or other authorized party saying it  may be distributed under the terms of this Lesser General Public  License  (also called
    this  License). Each licensee  is addressed as you.
    A  library means a  collection of software functions and/or  data prepared  so as to  be conveniently  linked with application
    programs (which  use some  of those  functions and  data)  to  form  executables.
    The  Library, below,  refers  to  any such software library or work  which has  been  distributed under these terms.  A  work
    based on the Library means either  the Library or any derivative work  under copyright  law: that  is to  say, a  work  containing
    the Library or a  portion of it,  either  verbatim or with modifications and/or  translated straightforwardly  into another language.
    (Hereinafter, translation  is included  without  limitation  in the term modification.)
    Source  code for a  work  means the preferred form  of the work  for making  modifications to  it.  For  a  library, complete  source
    code  means all the source code  for all modules it  contains, plus any associated  interface definition files, plus the scripts  used
    to  control compilation  and  installation of the library.
    Activities  other than  copying, distribution  and  modification are not covered by this License; they are outside its  scope. The  act
    of running  a  program  using  the Library is not restricted, and  output from  such a  program  is covered only  if its  contents
    constitute a  work  based on the Library (independent  of the use of the Library in a  tool for writing  it). Whether  that  is true
    depends on what  the Library does  and  what  the program  that  uses  the Library does.
    1. You  may copy  and  distribute  verbatim copies of the Librarys complete  source code  as you receive  it,  in any medium,
    provided  that  you conspicuously and  appropriately publish on each  copy  an appropriate copyright  notice  and  disclaimer  of
    warranty;  keep intact all the notices that  refer to  this License  and  to  the absence  of any warranty;  and  distribute  a  copy  of
    this License  along with the Library.
    You  may charge a  fee for the physical act  of transferring a  copy, and  you may at your  option offer warranty protection in
    exchange for a  fee.
    2. You  may modify  your  copy  or copies of the Library or any portion of it,  thus  forming a  work  based on the Library,  and  copy
    and  distribute  such modifications or work  under the terms of Section 1 above, provided  that  you also  meet all of these
    conditions:
    a. The  modified work  must  itself be a  software library.
    b. You  must  cause the files  modified to  carry prominent notices stating  that  you changed the files  and  the date of any change.
    c. You  must  cause the whole  of the work  to  be licensed at no charge to  all third  parties  under the terms of this License.
    d. If  a  facility  in the modified Library refers  to  a  function or a  table of data to  be supplied  by an application  program  that  uses
    the facility, other than  as an argument passed when  the facility  is invoked,  then  you must  make  a  good faith  effort to  ensure
    that, in the event an application  does  not supply  such function or table,  the facility  still operates, and  performs  whatever part
    of its  purpose  remains  meaningful.
    (For example, a  function in a  library to  compute  square roots has  a  purpose  that  is entirely well-defined  independent of the
    application. Therefore, Subsection 2d  requires  that  any application -supplied  function or table used by this function must  be
    optional: if the application  does  not supply  it,  the square root function must  still compute  square roots.)
    These requirements  apply to  the modified work  as a  whole. If  identifiable  sections of that  work  are not derived from  the
    Library,  and  can  be reasonably considered  independent and  separate  works in themselves, then  this License, and  its  terms,
    do not apply to  those  sections when  you distribute  them  as separate  works. But when  you distribute  the same  sections as
    part of a  whole  which is a  work  based on the Library,  the distribution  of the whole  must  be on the terms of this License,
    whose  permissions for other licensees  extend  to  the entire  whole, and  thus  to  each  and  every part regardless of who wrote  it.
    Thus,  it  is not the intent  of this section to  claim rights or contest your  rights to  work  written entirely by you; rather,  the
    intent  is to  exercise the right  to  control the distribution  of derivative or collective works based on the Library.
    In addition, mere  aggregation  of another work  not based on the Library with the Library (or with a  work  based on the Library)
    on a  volume  of a  storage  or distribution  medium does  not bring the other work  under the scope of this License.
    3. You  may opt to  apply the terms of the ordinary  GNU  General Public  License  instead of this License  to  a  given copy  of the
    Library.  To do this,  you must  alter all the notices that  refer to  this License, so that  they refer to  the ordinary  GNU  General
    Public  License, version 2, instead of to  this License. (If a  newer version than  version 2 of the ordinary  GNU  General Public
    License  has  appeared, then  you can  specify that  version instead if you wish.) Do not make  any other change  in these notices.
    Once this change  is made in a  given copy, it  is irreversible for that  copy, so the ordinary  GNU  General Public  License  applies
    to  all subsequent  copies and  derivative works made from  that  copy.
    This option is useful  when  you wish to  copy  part of the code  of the Library into a  program  that  is not a  library.
     
    						
    All Dell manuals Comments (0)

    Related Manuals for DELL V505 User Manual