"Radio may not itself be open, but Userland has a very liberal policy on allowing people to po
The point about code sharing in the UserLand developer community is true, though it's more accurately described as a "shared source" arrangement, since those of us who are releasing scripts have a dubious right to do so when our work is based, on any way, on source code in UserLand products. My Amazon format driver is based heavily on UserLand code, as I acknowledge in the source.
There are at least two open source clones of Radio Userland functionality: AmphetaDesk, a news aggregator that has a similar user interface and supports the OPML file format, and PyCS, the Radio Community Server clone that hosts this weblog. I expect to see more in the future, considering the number of talented open source muckety mucks who have found their way to Radio Userland. It's unique software that clearly meets a need, and since UserLand built it on open, documented protocols, anyone can play. [Workbench]