aMule
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aMule
Summary
aMule is a peer-to-peer software[1]. aMule has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- aMule's instance of is recorded as peer-to-peer software[3].
- aMule's instance of is recorded as free software[4].
- aMule's instance of is recorded as fork[5].
- aMule's instance of is recorded as open-source software[6].
- aMule's instance of is recorded as source-available software[7].
- aMule's based on is recorded as eMule[8].
- aMule's based on is recorded as xMule[9].
- aMule's copyright license is recorded as GNU General Public License, version 2.0[10].
- aMule's copyright license is recorded as GNU General Public License, version 2.0 or later[11].
- aMule's programmed in is recorded as Q2407[12].
- aMule's operating system is recorded as Q3251801[13].
- aMule's operating system is recorded as BSD[14].
- aMule's operating system is recorded as macOS[15].
- aMule's software version identifier is recorded as 2.3.2[16].
- aMule's software version identifier is recorded as 2.3.3[17].
- aMule is used for peer-to-peer file sharing[18].
- aMule's Commons category is recorded as AMule[19].
- 2003 marks the founding of aMule[20].
- aMule's official website is recorded as http://www.amule.org[21].
- aMule's source code repository URL is recorded as https://github.com/amule-project/amule[22].
- aMule's GUI toolkit or framework is recorded as wxWidgets[23].
- aMule's copyright status is recorded as copyrighted[24].
Body
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include peer-to-peer software[3], free software[4], fork[5], open-source software[6], and source-available software[7].
History and Context
2003 marks the founding of aMule[20].
Why It Matters
aMule has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]