On Thu, Nov 28, 2013 at 2:53 AM, Bastien bastiengue...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm working on a website where people will be able to ask donations
more easily for their FLOSS achievements and future projects, I'd love
to see both directions (more commercial options and more crowdfunded
FLOSS
Hi Joshua,
Your answer is very much appreciated.
My hypothesis right now is that highly successful /open source/ projects,
already having profit or not, can usually take care of themselves. As well
as hardly any established software company needs a broker. But examples on
everyone's lips are
Hello, Clojure community.
I have been following the Clojure path for nearly two years now, and have
really great pleasure
using it in my personal and job projects, watching the community delivering
a lot of great things,
most of that I have yet to taste.
For some time I was incubating an idea
Hi Stanislav,
Stanislav Yurin jusk...@gmail.com writes:
In short, on top of every open greatness, it is good to have
options.
Indeed.
The last thing I am willing to do is to build something no one needs,
so I have decided to evaluate an idea.
The idea is simple: introducing the
as long as it does not swallow
some of the free software code out there.
I have the same fears.
Josh
On Thu, Nov 28, 2013 at 1:53 PM, Bastien bastiengue...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Stanislav,
Stanislav Yurin jusk...@gmail.com writes:
In short, on top of every open greatness, it is good to
Hi,
Thanks Bastien, Josh,
I think we have yet to find an example of such kind of swallowing, if any
exists.
On contrary, we even have plenty of examples when commercial projects
turned FOSS,
not talking about peaceful coexistence of openness and alternative
licensing schemes.
And it is often a
Hi Stanislav,
just to clarify my position: I'm fine with diversity, and I don't
expect any FLOSS clojure project to be swallowed. I just wanted to
mention my hope of more donation-supported libraries. But that's a
different issue and I don't want to hijack this thread (more than I
already
On Thursday, November 28, 2013 at 12:10, Stanislav Yurin wrote:
Hello, Clojure community.
I have been following the Clojure path for nearly two years now, and have
really great pleasure
using it in my personal and job projects, watching the community delivering a
lot of great things,