"There’s Still No Viable Open Source Business Model"
via https://gestaltit.com/podcast/tom/theres-still-no-viable-open-source-business-model/
SourceHut proves this wrong. Every single line of code we've written is open source, since day one. There are no periodic code dumps, no prototyping in private, no open core with paid extensions. We accept patches from the public. Our company is 100% bona-fide open source.
We've been profitable for 2 years, and our profit margin continues to grow. We published our Q3 financial report last week:
https://sourcehut.org/blog/2020-11-11-sourcehut-q3-2020-financial-report/
It's still early, and we're still small. We did not take on any outside investments, either. But the model works. You CAN make money in open source.
What's next? Sharing random music videos of course! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vs61OHs2g-w
Once again I'm creating accounts under the shorter alias cnx! Free and (maybe) distributed sites might not have many users, but that's not always a bad thing!
Was there an announcement that it's safe to upgrade just yet? The thread on Pine64 forum still says otherwise: https://forum.pine64.org/showthread.php?tid=12021
links like this are reason enough to be on activitypub: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BZlRt05RY9Y
Now this is nice: https://aerc-mail.org
Why isn't send-email more popular? It's so much simpler than PR/MR: https://git-send-email.io
Let's try together: https://framatube.org/videos/watch/d4aab174-50ca-4455-bb32-ed463982e943
In a world where technology can mean the difference between life and death, can we afford the restrictions proprietary software places on progress? Watch and share "Rewind," our latest video promoting #UserFreedom: https://u.fsf.org/rewind
Why all the hate on #purism they might have oversold the #librem5 as a daily driver but I hope most bought it to progress the ecosystem... I'm so greatful for the work they did on #phosh and #libhandy that make my #pinephone usable.
For most of this year, @zwol and I have been working on a pretty ambitious project:
* to make a fresh release of GNU Autoconf, a crucial #FLOSS build tool that hadn't had a new release since 2012
* to get paid for that
* to help put Autoconf on a more sustainable footing so it doesn't have to get rescued again a little while down the road
Autoconf 2.70 is due out next month, and you can read my fresh LWN story about the rejuvenation & what's next:
I'm a Vietnamese undergrad student and a free software enthusiast.