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From: | Miles Fidelman |
Subject: | Re: [libreplanet-discuss] [fossil-users] [OT] Who's interested in project management & collaboration tools? And... |
Date: | Fri, 10 Aug 2012 10:28:54 -0400 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.6; rv:14.0) Gecko/20120715 Firefox/14.0.1 SeaMonkey/2.11 |
Mark Holmquist wrote:
2. try to limit dissemination during alpha and beta to those who are likely to test and contribute (I really don't want to inflict really early code on folks who simply want a usable tool - I figure that's doing them a disservice) (note: since the alpha and beta code will be available as source, under GPL, there's nothing stopping further dissemination - just that I'm not going to be pushing the early code on the world)This is directly contrary to:Pledge $25 or moreAccess to software on release date - plus 5-year system-wide identity and crypto credentials.
<etc>
I wasn't just making things up, there it is in black and white. There is one more offering server-side code on the alpha release date, and it's more money. You charge people extra to get the code.
It's not contradictory at all. If you pay, you get: - access to our distribution server to download code - access to a hosted version of the server-side componentsSince the code will be GPLd (or other open source license) it is freely re-distributable. It's just that WE won't be re-distributing it openly until we get to a reasonably shaken down release 1.0.
This is directly contrary to your statement that this is open software. It's definitely contrary to it being free software.So please, stop spreading it here. If it's not free software, we don't want it.
The goal is to raise some cash so we can spend our time coding - we don't have deep pockets and we don't have a big grant or an employer paying the freight. So... if you have a suggestion on an alternate way to frame a Kickstarter fund-raising effort, and what to offer folks who contribute, please pipe up.
Miles Fidelman -- In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is. .... Yogi Berra
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