Roman Stangl
Roman Stangl
Roman is 30 years old and has worked for IBM Austria since 1994. He has been a member of a C/C++ OS/2 project. He is currently involved in check processing outsourced to IBM by an Austrian bank. He got his first PC in 1982 and quickly made the transition from DOS to OS/2. Besides OS/2 programming, he uses his LAN at home to try out emerging technologies like multimedia and WWW applications. Additionally he has some hardware experience and doesn't hesitate to use a soldering iron. Besides being interested in everything related to PCs, he is interested in high-tech from A to Z. He is a single and lives in a household with his parents and loves to care for the peach trees he has grown from the cores. He now has his own car, but prefers public transportation utilities.
You can reach Roman at Roman_Stangl@at.ibm.com
Roman has written the following articles (and republished them under GNU FDL):
Adding BLDLEVEL information to executables (June 1997)
Fitting a Notebook into a Dialog (July 1997)
Notebook Key Processing (August 1997)
Rebooting OS/2 (September 1997)
Disabling a Window (Rectangle) (October 1997)
Managing DOS Settings (July 1998)
Calling PM from AVIO Applications (August 1998)
Writing permission from Roman
To: Yuri Prokushev <yuri_prokushev@mail.ru> Subject: Re: EDM/2 articles From: Roman Stangl <roman_stangl@at.ibm.com> Date: Wed, 17 Nov 2004 09:48:59 +0100 Hi Yuri! >May be you know about relaunch of EDM/2 magazine. That's great news, I remember to wait each month for the latest release and was disappointed that it stopped suddenly, though I understood that the demand for OS/2 in general became too low. I'm curious how the relaunch will work in the future, and if there are signs that it is accepted I may invest some time to write a few things I did want when the old magazine died ;-). >I want to ask you about republish of your articles under FDL license so other ppls can fix & >extend your articles. You can read more on www.edm2.com site. Thank you for you help. Hmm, I have to admit that I justed google'd what FDL is *gg*. From flying over it it seems that it just says more or less 'it's free just do with it what you want' (ok, I admit that I'm absolutely desinterested in studying legal stuff, thus didn't read it exactly). But, and you can take that as my written permission, I agree that my articles can be republished under the FDL license, and I agree that you can add the claim my articles are under the FDL license (I personally currently do not have the time, nor do I use OS/2 frequently, nor do I know where I still have the stuff at home). If I need to add the FDL license myself it surely will take a while, if you want to do it, you're warmly welcome! Warm regards/Mit besten Gruessen! Roman Roman_Stangl@at.ibm.com, Roman_Stangl@vnet.ibm.com http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Pines/7885/ Support open source code (www.opensource.org)!