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The Speedcuber Timer logo. A green cube fading into view as it climbs into the light

Speedcuber Timer

The smart, offline-ready speedcubing app made for speedcubers, by speedcubers.

Supports Android and iOS!

Top Features

  • Connect to most brands of smartcubes simultaneously.
  • Automatic solve recordings and reconstructions.
  • Replay your smartcube-recorded solves to review and improve.
  • Support for all official events of the World Cube Association, and many common unofficial events!
  • All the statistics you know and love.
  • And much more!
Connect to Smartcubes Detailed Statistics
Automatic Reconstructions Track Turn Speed

Contributing

Thank you for your interest in contributing to this project! There are lots of ways you can do so:

See CONTRIBUTING.md for more information!

The Legal Stuff

`speedcuber-timer` by Joseph Hale is licensed under the terms of the Mozilla
Public License, v 2.0, which are available at https://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/.

You can download the source code for `speedcuber-timer` for free from
https://github.com/SpeedcuberOSS/speedcuber-timer.

TL;DR

You can use files from this project in both open source and proprietary applications, provided you include the above attribution. However, if you modify any code in this project, or copy blocks of it into your own code, you must publicly share the resulting files (note, not your whole program) under the MPL-2.0. The best way to do this is via a Pull Request back into this project.

If you have any other questions, you may also find Mozilla's official FAQ for the MPL-2.0 license insightful.

If you dislike this license, you can contact me about negotiating a paid contract with different terms.

Disclaimer: This TL;DR is just a summary. All legal questions regarding usage of this project must be handled according to the official terms specified in the LICENSE file.

Why the MPL-2.0 license?

I believe that an open-source software license should ensure that code can be used everywhere.

Strict copyleft licenses, like the GPL family of licenses, fail to fulfill that vision because they only permit code to be used in other GPL-licensed projects. Permissive licenses, like the MIT and Apache licenses, allow code to be used everywhere but fail to prevent proprietary or GPL-licensed projects from limiting access to any improvements they make.

In contrast, the MPL-2.0 license allows code to be used in any software project, while ensuring that any improvements remain available for everyone.