Learning to sort through online information on the current COVID-19 outbreak – an excellent resource from Mike Caufield on evaluating news online.
Social Listening on a Budget
Social listening also a great way to learn about trends and identify unusual issues. Get started with social listening on a budget.
Source: Social Listening on a Budget
WNDW – The Book
Wireless Network in the Developing World
Source: WNDW – The Book
Tried out the Little Outliner tweet feature with my impeachment song – check out the tweet series!
A cool description of an IndieWebCamp held virtually – neat! (via Chris Aldrich)
Completed testing of Little Outliner menu commands and icons, found some problems, see the “Summary of Test Failures” summit in my public outline for more information.
Can Packt Publishing be making any money?
Recently, I was looking for some books on developing desktop applications for Ubuntu. It seemed that Packt Publishing had the most recent titles, which was one of the criteria I was using for selecting the books. However, I noticed that many of them were available as E-books for $5, compared to a hard copy price of $50 or more. After my searching, I then saw numerous Packt ads highlighting the $5 price. How can they (or their authors) be making any money at that price? To me, this removes incentive to spend the effort to create a book of 300 pages or more to sell for $5 a copy. Am I missing something here?
Thoughts from a user
After listening to Dave Winer’s voicemailcast today, I decided to create my own in response. I used Little Outliner to create a set of show notes (link), the podcast is shown below. Let me know what you think…anyone, anyone at all….
Link to Internet Archive version of show notes
Paying for the development of software
I recently read a post on funding of software developed for academic/research use, the author stated that many grants are for new applications, and that funding agencies should consider supporting existing open source software that goes unfunded. There were links to papers such as the development of AstroPy, and a report by Nadia Eghbal on funding of Internet digital infrastructure development. I have touched on this topic before in a recent post about the development/funding story of the Node Package Manager. All of these stories touch on some common problems:
- People write software, put it out on the web, people use it or they don’t.
- If a lot of people start using it, and start asking for features/fixes, how do those get done? How do the developers get reimbursed for their time and effort?
- What if a business uses open source software at no direct cost? How can they depend on that software being supported and available?
Businesses that develop physical products that contain custom software pay for that software as part of the development cost of the product. This may be the best example of funding for software development.
To me, the idea of a subscription fee makes the most sense. The user paying a fee gets a specified level of support, for example, or early access to new versions. The developer gets a steadier stream of income than one-time payments (like for smartphone apps). There are other problems to address that I am not going to solve in this post, but people who develop applications should consider these topics before starting (they should “count the costs”).