Supporting Community Projects 88
Lulu has announced a new program of creating boxed sets around particular technologies. They've got Fedora Core 3, OpenOffice, Bugzilla, as well our little Slashcode . The boxes include documentation and the code on CD with the money going back to support the communities building it. Lulu also does a whole bunch of cool stuff around self-publishing for on-demand items.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
More money to the developers? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:More money to the developers? (Score:1, Insightful)
I dont know, it doesnt sound in the spirit of the GPL thats all
Re:More money to the developers? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:More money to the developers? (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, having an object for sale aids people in donating because it removes the burden of choosing how much to donate from their shoulders. Without such an avenue, many people worry about how much to donate, and whether or not they should send some sorts of messages with a donation, and a million other things. That's also why all projects of even a moderate size should have an FAQ section on giving donations.
Further, in the case of this product, it is essentially just a wing of the original group making a boxed, distributable product, as the project receives the profits, and the project is entirely volunteer anyway.
Re:More money to the developers? (Score:3, Interesting)
I agree, and I also think it helps to have the nice shiny boxed set available with documentation, etc.
Speaking from my own experience trying to introduce Linux to coworkers, the more packaged it looks the better. Just yesterday I offered a coworker a couple of options for buying a bootable Linux CD, and he opted to bypass the $2.95 versions in favour of the more expensive CD with training videos bundle.It is called 'consumer confidence' (Score:3, Insightful)
By simply printing a copy, binding it, and attaching the CD (about 0.0000000...001% of the costs) the customer thought it was worth an extra grand or so...
good business!
Re:It is called 'consumer confidence' (Score:1)
This time selecting the right text mode. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:More money to the developers? (Score:4, Interesting)
You're right, as far as you take it. If your main concerns are 1)minimize your costs and 2)maximize your $ contribution to the Open Source community, then you shouldn't buy the Lulu packages. Download, burn, and donate.
But don't forget that what Lulu is selling, really, is convenience. There may well be some folks who would rather send some $ to Lulu (and feel good about supporting open source in the process) than go through the download-and-burn process. And don't discount the convenience of having well-printed documentation! If all you have at home is a little inkjet printer with its expensive cartridges, printing a few hundred pages of docs is neither easy nor cheap.
The open question is whether the market for these packages will percieve Lulu as offering enough value to balance the cost. Looks like they don't, for you. I'll have to look closer to decide for myself. But if the folks at Lulu have things set up right, then pretty much everyone benefits.
I wonder why they didn't package the Mozilla suite? Maybe they're waiting until Mozilla, Firefox, and Thunderbird are all at 1.x or better.
Re:More money to the developers? (Score:2)
Incidentally, they also support independent publishers, and some well known guys have published through these guys.
I think of them as the equivalent of Cafepress [cafepress.com] for Books, Music and CDs (ofcourse, they do other things, too).
Not bad, atleast it's a beginning attempt at offsetting the centralistic corporate culture in these areas.
Re:More money to the developers? (Score:1)
http://www22.pair.com/csdc/car/carfre3.htm [pair.com]
http://www.lulu.com/kiehn [lulu.com]
Re:More money to the developers? (Score:2)
More of the liberal-arts kinds.
Don't recall the specific instances, sorry.
Re:More money to the developers? (Score:1)
Anyone here ever publish anything through Lulu?
Like music, the more that we can take out of the hands of the huge publishing houses, the better we'll all
Here's the point (well, a point) (Score:4, Interesting)
I guess I'm not sure what the point is of this. If you want to support these projects, why not just donate it directly to them?
I see quite a bit of value in Lulu's products. When I want to encourage support for FOSS among people who are unfamiliar with it, these package deals could be just the ticket. This is something I could send as a gift to a relative, or pass around in a meeting while I was presenting the advantages of a windows to linux migration.
I will probably buy the OpenOffice set in the next month or so and if it is as well done as it looks on the web site, I expect to make heavy use of it next year (without ever spinning its CD).
Because they make great xmas gifts! (Score:2)
You can imagine my feigned surprise...
Sometimes Money != Support (Score:3, Insightful)
* monetary support--help feed the coders
* technical support--dontate time and skills to find and fix bugs, or add functionality
* moral support--advocacy/evangelism, marketing, publicity.
The first two everyone has been aware of for some time. People have donated $ to software causes and sent in patches since before the dawn of GNU. The last point i
'Buy' Is Not a Dirty Word (Score:2)
Why do so mnay people keep using language like "support these projects" when they ought to just say "buy". "Buy" is not a dirty word.
Support (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Support (Score:4, Insightful)
Keep in mind that Lulu was founded by Bob Young (Red Hat), so this is not that much of a stretch.
Re:Support (Score:1)
http://www.aboutpaypal.org/ [aboutpaypal.org]5 00173 [slashdot.org]
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=125307&cid=10
Re:Support (Score:2)
Pro: Low fees (about 0.5 cents minimum), inflation-proof, more private than credit cards or checks, trivially easy to set up accounts, truly international.
Con: Hard to get gold in your account, and don't even dare use IE if you have a significant amount of gold in your account; transactions are irrevocable, so password-stealing worms can steal your gold!
Awfully vague descrptions (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Fedora Core 3 ? (Score:2, Informative)
Regards,
Steve
Ready To Run Software (Score:5, Interesting)
The boxes include documentation and the code on CD with the money going back to support the communities building it.
Many years ago, I worked as an intern for Ready To Run Software, which did something similar; they'd take common packages such as GNU textutils or gcc (which were not part of ANY Unix back then, and Linux was still in its infancy), clean 'em up, make a good installer (again, before the days of autoconf and clever install scripts), provide some decent documentation, and package it all with an executable wrapper onto the tape medium of your choice, for just about -any- Unix in use. Lastly- they supported the product with various contracts and telephone support. Now, they have a porting center with a zillion different Unixes, all set up to play nice, where you can port stuff from Odd Box A to New System B.
I couldn't find it now, but I know back then you could search on a couple of RTR employee email addresses and find stuff in changelogs for most of the core GNU software packages; often times they were one of the very few companies doing actual QA work on these packages (I know, my internship was in QA) and submitting patches and bug reports; they're probably responsible for a lot of the improvements in portability in these packages. RTR also did all the behind the scenes work for the Oreilly powertools CD...
Cool company. I liked working for them- and not just because of the Free Candy table with lots of chocolate (all the machines, and there were almost 50 of them, were named after chocolate. My powermac running linuxppc was 'orange', which took some finagling- "Orange chocolate?").
Re:Ready To Run Software (Score:1)
http://www.kraft.com.au/confectionery/index.cfm
Re:Ready To Run Software (Score:1, Informative)
Huh??? http://www.rtr.com/ [rtr.com]
Updates (Score:5, Insightful)
For the less technically oriented end-user, to whom I assume these boxes are pitched, some form of automatic download + patch would be a must.
Can't find anything on lulu.com that talks about this - without it, the product is going to be dangerous (unpatched vulns galore)...
Re:Updates (Score:1)
There is a live neuron level interface directly into CmdrTaco's brain.
Every time he plays with the HTML it automagically changes worldwide.
Microsoft tried to impliment this technology, but unfortunately they couldn't find a suitable port to plug into. Early test versions ended up making Bill crosseyed, and even made monkey boy balmer blush.
Re:Updates (Score:1)
Re:Updates (Score:1)
Sure, its not totally geared for it, but if you want it out there, and its just a single flat file, why the heck not!
Re:Updates (Score:1)
Regards,
Steve
Re:Updates (Score:2)
just like buying any other "boxed" software then isn't it...
Re:Updates (Score:1)
Re:Updates (Score:1)
I checked out some of their cool stuff .... (Score:4, Funny)
Living in Vertical Time [lulu.com]
by Brian Narelle
Description: The Teachings of Murray the Buru. These ruminations on life, love and peace were inspired by a donkey named Murray, a special soul housed in a 600 pound body. My friend, my teacher...my '"buru". (104 pages)
Just in time for Festivus gift giving: Open Office (Score:1)
Re:Just in time for Festivus gift giving: Open Off (Score:2)
the open cd [sunsite.dk]: Free apps for windoze
ubuntu livecd [ubuntulinux.org] - if you try the cd in windoze it lets you install OO.o and a couple of other Free apps
Now, to decide which to include in all my xmas presents this year....
-Leigh
Lulu easiest/cheapest way to get listed on Amazon (Score:5, Interesting)
I found that Lulu.com's "ISBN Plus" service was the easiest and cheapest way to get my book listed on Amazon.com and BN.com. For less than $200 you get an ISBN and inclusion on these two major sites. You still need to do all the marketing myself, but there are numerous discussions in Lulu's forums about "guerilla marketing" your work. Getting it reviewed on Amazon and BN, creating Amazon lists of best-selling items that are similar to yours and including yours on that list, creating a "So you want to..." page and including your item on the page along with similar items, uploading a complete description/cover/excerpt for your product, etc. Seems that some of these would apply to marketing your software as well.
I'm curious about how effective getting listed on Amazon and BN is for software. Do many customers bother searching these sites when they're shopping for software? Or do they use dedicated tech sites, or just go right to Google for the software? I'd like to see some comments posted in a few months by some of the software sellers who've tried this.
Re:Lulu easiest/cheapest way to get listed on Amaz (Score:1)
Thanks for the warning! Now we all know to ignore those features on Amazon, if we didn't already.
Slashcode? excuse me, but GROSS (Score:1, Offtopic)
Parent Post NOT Off-topic (Score:2)
The parent post was in no way "off-topic"
Cafe Press? (Score:1, Redundant)
-- Taj
This is great!!! (Score:2)
There are a lot of very competent computer users that have no idea that free/OSS software that is often superior to it's proprietary cousins is available... and rather than looking all over the internet for the best free/oss app for their needs, then downloading a crapload of disparate parts, then the documentation, then some HowTo they'd rather pluck down their cash on an a
Re:This is great!!! (Score:3, Interesting)
Lazy people are not an issue, it is the people who do not have time we should be concerned with... Lazy people will not be a market to worry about, as changing wil require effort that they are too lazy to do untli a critical mass is reached in the market and they no longer feel lazy about a change. Time conscious professionals who demand productivity at a bottom cost are the market to target. They are the ones to make changes and take a chance on something different, especially if it can
Slashcode? (Score:2)
Re:Slashcode? (Score:2)
Fedora Core 3? (Score:2)
Because Fedora Core 3 hasn't been released yet. If you go to the Fedora website [redhat.com], you'll see Fedora Core 3 Test 3 and Fedora Core 2. So...how do these people have Fedora Core 3, given that it doesn't exist?
Explain to me (Score:2)
Funny thing is... (Score:1)
I'm not sure they are following the GPL correctly (Score:1)