July 9, 2008
@ 09:13 PM

Many people use open source tools, whether its NUnit, Nant, Rhino, or log4net in their professional lives.  If you use any of these tools, when was the last time you donated time and/or money to any of the open source tools you use?  That's what I thought. 

I was recently watching the Hibernating Rhinos from Ayende Rahien and I wanted to thank Oren.  Right there on the Hibernating Rhinos page it reads:

donate

I wanted to donate.  Perhaps because the videos provided so much guidance from one of our industries finest.  Perhaps because I've met Oren and generally think he's a good guy.  Regardless, I donated some money.  Not much, but some.  Something to say, "thank you, I appreciate this.

Curious if other donate, I emailed Ayende to see what revenue, if any, his video series has generated.  I wanted to know well the community was supporting a popular training tool.  Here's the stats, lifted a few moments ago.

image

So how much has Oren received from this video series?  Guess.  Seriously.  $125 since September 2007.  From the stats above there have been 242,610 downloads of the videos. That breaks down to .000515 per download!!!  As a community that's quite pathetic.

From here on I've resolved to donate a dollar any time I download a free library or webcast where a donate link is presented.  Why $1?  In all honesty it is something I can commit to.  I download and use a lot of tools, so I don't want ongoing cost to hinder me.  $1 is a token to say thanks, acknowledging the work that's been put into the product.  I would challenge you to make a similar commitment for the tools you use.  Let's show the author(s) of these tools/libraries that we do appreciate the work they do!


 
Thursday, July 10, 2008 5:49:42 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
Fair call Tim and good job! ;)
Tuesday, July 15, 2008 5:15:22 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
As a recipient of one of the $1 donations (in response to my request for donations to support my screencast series on NHibernate), I have to say 'thanks' even for the token amount -- its the thought that counts rather than the sum so: thanks for the thought :)

Its a sad state of affairs that the internet community/culture is so much about 'something for nothing' that most content creators (OSS or otherwise) often find their requests for even a paltry contribution to fall on deaf ears.

While I cannot boast a quarter of a million downloads of my screencasts (and given my bandwidth cap for my hosting site, its probably a good thing!), I have to validate Oren's numbers at least in principle -- many more downloaders than contributors wherever one chooses to look.
Tuesday, July 15, 2008 6:31:42 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
Steve,

It should be me who is thanking you. The videos you put out are a resource that would have taken me hours upon hours to duplicate.

I hope that as OSS becomes more accepted (NHibernate, Castle, log4net) that we'll see people showing their appreciation with their wallets and/or time.

Tim
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