Vendor Pays OSS Developers for Enterprise Support
Anonymous Coward writes "eWeek is reporting that a company called OpenLogic is paying qualified experts in the open-source community to provide enterprise support for projects they are intimately familiar with. OpenLogic calls its new initiative its Expert Community program."
From their website:
In other words, no, you're not going to get paid for helping. You will receive 10 Bazooka Joe comics for each Apache installation, and 5 Chuck E. Cheese tickets per debugged line of code.
Public use of any portable music system is a virtually guaranteed indicator of sociopathic tendencies. -- Zoso
They get paid in points which, supposedly, can be cashed in for cash and prizes. So can tickets I win at the local skee-ball arcade, but I don't expect to make a living there either. I couldn't find a public list of how much various items cost in points, what the turn around time for cashing in points is, or even what items are available (other than the Xbox 360). Also, it looks like they get a fixed amount of points by severity, rather than based on the difficulty of the problem. This means the more difficult problems will be actively avoided, as the pay/hr is not worth it. I'd be seriously concerned about all of that if I was considering signing up. Of course, I rather doubt I have committer access on any of the projects they're looking for anyway.
On a side note- anyone else find it amusing that the big reward they're pimping out is an MS product?
I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
The press release says in fact:and:And (slightly offtopic, but put more elequontly & humorously then the usual 'blah blah, oss has noone to sue'):You sir, are a shill from one of the proprietary companies, trembling in their boots about new business models.
There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
Also does it not rebutt the myth that if you have the code you can easily maintain and improve it yourself?
It proves the truth that if you have access to the code you can easily maintain and improve it yourself by paying someone to do it for you. Or did you think that simply having the code automatically makes everyone a programmer? Or (more likely) are you deliberately misinterpreting this "myth" to make some snarky straw-man point? In any case, your comment made me laugh my ass off and now I need to "rebutt" myself.
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton