QSL Cards as a Way of Tracking Open-Source Software?
"It's always encouraging to receive a thank you for your work,
and that's what a QSL card would be, a personalized thank you and
memento from each downloader. It would be good for the community too:
if we are working for our egos, then QSL cards would be an
inexpensive way to boost a developer's ego. (Considering how
few of you are clicking on that PayPal button, perhaps you might be
motivated to buy a stack of QSL cards and to send them out)
It would be good for the economy: buying, printing, sending QSL
cards will help developers, printers, and the post office. And it can
be good for our projects: we might find that in addition to tee
shirts and coffee mugs, our development projects can sell a variety
of promotional QSL cards to developers to send to others.
So how do we turn this into the meme for 2002?"
People are just to darn lazy to give a damn. It's just to easy to not send a card, no one will see that you didn't do it. I say we should force everyone who has used postcardware without "paying" the license to wear a yellow cone on their head.
But I guess most of us would be wearing 'em then.