Hi Eric,
thank you for the suggestion. Do you know how much money they take for
their service and if they accept Paypal (I just thought about this, and
not accepting Paypal is imho close to a knockout, to keep the entry
barrier as low as possible; that would exclude Kickstarter according to
their FAQ, but here one could probably assume that many potential Groovy
backers would already have an account...).
Do they support specific funding foals also (which typically attract
more funding), or is a subscription only model ?
Cheers,
mg
On 18.02.2018 14:15, Eric Kinsella wrote:
I know of some indie game developers and podcasters that are using
Patreon. A possible alternative to something like
KickStarter/Indiegogo with more of a subscription model which could
even be $1/month.
https://www.patreon.com
What is Patreon? - video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=1&v=rwvUjAv6pxg
Cheers,
Eric Kinsella
On Fri, Feb 16, 2018 at 12:37 PM, MG <mg...@arscreat.com
<mailto:mg...@arscreat.com>> wrote:
That should be no problem, I would be happy to do a Groovy "thank
you" mug o.s. :-)
On 16.02.2018 17:11, Mario Garcia wrote:
+1 but also keep in mind that sometimes could be also something
as simple as a "grateful box pack" with a T-shirt, sticker or a
mug. I would love that too.
Mario
El 16 feb. 2018 11:49 a. m., "Jochen Theodorou"
<blackd...@gmx.org <mailto:blackd...@gmx.org>> escribió:
Am 16.02.2018 um 03:27 schrieb Paul King:
Actually, Apache also accept donations but I think the
standard policy is that it isn't then directed back to a
specific project.
I actually am of the impression that this is the only
policy... might be wrong here.
I think in general we would be in favor of doing this so
long as it was done well - and most of us wonder whether
we have the time to market/advertise it well. I also
suspect that having a well-defined goal (like what JUnit
5 did to some degree) greatly helps to attract some
one-off investment interest.
+1
bye Jochen