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?"
It's either majordomo or majorcool that says "would you like to send an email to the author stating you've successfully installed this software"... more or less... That's one way that this could work..
ChiefArcher
The disturbing thing is that close to a third of the downloads for my KDE applications are from the default IE user. I wonder what all those people do when they get a source tarball instead of whatever it is they're expecting.
What I'm listening to now on Pandora...