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Re: Lilypond <-> Sibelius
From: |
David Kastrup |
Subject: |
Re: Lilypond <-> Sibelius |
Date: |
Fri, 01 Jun 2018 15:43:50 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/26.0.50 (gnu/linux) |
Nicholas Bailey <address@hidden> writes:
> On Friday, 25 May 2018 22:09:31 BST J Martin Rushton wrote:
>> On 25/05/18 10:52, Nicholas Bailey wrote:
>> > On Sunday, 22 April 2018 12:26:01 BST J Martin Rushton wrote:
>> >> What is the current state of play for converting between Sibelius and
>> >> Lily?
>> >>
>> >> My elder son uses Sib at university, but has to travel in (40 miles) to
>> >> log into one of their machines. I run Lily/Frescobaldi at home and it
>> >> would be useful to be able to let him work at home and take it in to
>> >> uni, and conversely print off uni work at home. I assume the uni
>> >> machines are WinBoxes, we run Linux and Windows at home.
>> >
>> > Any chance the university offers a VPN facility? Could he get a
>> > site-licensed copy and run it at home using that? Whether or not that's
>> > "legal" depends on the exact terms of the license I suppose. I could go
>> > off on a "why do you want to do that??" rant, but it's been done already
>> > ;)
>> >
>> > NJB/.
>>
>> Nice thought, but I suspect a little close to the wind. In the end I've
>> installed MuseScore both on my machine and his laptop.
>> Regards,
>> Martin
>
> Glad you got a resolution.
>
> Actually, our group's music prof has a load of stuff he wrote years back on
> Sibelius 5 which, fortunately, mostly runs under Wine. Since he owns a copy
> he
> can use that. It was a royal PITA trying to get Sibelius to issue an
> authorisation code! I don't think more modern versions work under Wine, but
> I've not looked into it for a while.
>
> I think he's really got the message that using proprietary solutions is
> effectively handing your work over to the software producers. There's lots of
> lilyponding going on here now :)
To be fair, non-proprietary (and human-mungeable) export formats like
MusicXML at least give you a bit of a handle on your own work.
Proprietary binary formats are sort-of final when you lose access for
some reason.
--
David Kastrup