Hi Also bear in mind if you want to go to your boss and tell him 'I need $XYZ to fund a feature in QGIS', the simplest (and in my mind preferred) way to do it is to approach one or more of the developers / companies listed on our web site [1] and ask them for a quote. If your feature is of general interest, you can stipulate that they should develop it in a way that is compliant with our coding norms and submit it for peer review and possibly inclusion into the core of QGIS. The advantage is that the QGIS project is then simply a recipient of a nice new feature / bug fix and all the transactional stuff (legal and financial) is the burden of the client and the contracting company only.
[1] http://www.qgis.org/en/commercial-support.html Regards Tim On Sun, Jun 19, 2011 at 4:35 PM, Micha Silver <[email protected]> wrote: > ** > On 19/06/2011 10:38, Paolo Cavallini wrote: > > Il giorno sab, 18/06/2011 alle 20.53 +0800, Ramon Andinach ha scritto: > > Hello all (developers and non-developers both), > Consider this a reaction to "have you considered sponsoring development". > From a non-developer. Who is still trying to understand how the sponsoring > development idea works. > > Hi Ramon. > I appreciate your thoughts; the proposed route seems to me rather > complex to implement, but if you think you can manage it, I do not see > anybody stopping you. > Let's work out a modus operandi. > All the best. > > It might be interesting to follow a similar "fund drive" [1] organized by > a developer, Warren Togami to save the K12Linux (Terminal Server) project. > There have been packages for ltsp on for Enterprise Linux 5, used in many > schools for years now. However changes in the EL6 distro caused many of the > required features not to work. Warren had worked on K12Linux previously as > a Red Hat employee, and volunteer. He came out recently with a proposal to > work on fixing some of the key issues, but he required pledges of > contributions from users before beginning work. > He began modestly with a goal of $750. Users - thru the maillist - soon > pitched in with sums of around $50. Then RedHat came forward and promised > an additional $500 matching $500 from new contributors. That goal was also > quickly reached and at this point Warren now has promises (and real money > transfers) of a few $1000. He has now set a list of specific goals he hopes > to achieve and the funding needed. And He's thrown up a youtube video of > what works so far. > > So what can we learn form this (apparently) successful pledge drive? > 1- The initiative came from a programmer, not users. > 2- He was well aware of the problem at hand and what users needed > 3- He laid out very specific goals,fees, and a schedule from the get go. > 4- Corporate funding jumped on the bandwagon after "regular" users showed a > genuine interest by paying small sums. > > Maybe this can be of help in planning sponsorship for ongoing development > of QGIS? > > > [1] https://fedorahosted.org/k12linux/wiki/2011FundDrive > > -- > > [image: Hevra Logo] > > Micha Silver > > Arava Development Co > > 052-3665918 > > http://www.surfaces.co.il > > _______________________________________________ > Qgis-developer mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-developer > > -- Tim Sutton - QGIS Project Steering Committee Member (Release Manager) ============================================== Please do not email me off-list with technical support questions. Using the lists will gain more exposure for your issues and the knowledge surrounding your issue will be shared with all. Visit http://linfiniti.com to find out about: * QGIS programming and support services * Mapserver and PostGIS based hosting plans * FOSS Consulting Services Skype: timlinux Irc: timlinux on #qgis at freenode.net ==============================================
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