Craigslist Donates $100,000 To the Perl Foundation
mikejuk writes "The craigslist Charitable Fund has donated $100,000 to the Perl community for Perl5 maintenance and general use by the Perl Foundation. Craigslist gets more than 30 billion views per month and it is mostly written in Perl. The entire architecture of the system is open source — a proxy array based on Perl and memcache and a backend provided by Apache, memcache, MySQL and, of course, Perl. This is a successful enterprise giving something back to open source — which is how it should be."
Nice from the Craigslist folks. Aren't they eBay-owned though? Anyway, good to see perl getting some loving for a change.
And how many other companies making extensive use of Perl will pony up?
Nice to see that they make enough $ to make a donation like that, without the standard income generating popups that most websites use. Yes Virginia, there is a Santa Claus.
Great! Now maybe the perl folks can afford to fix their epic memory leaks that have been their bug list for the better part of a decade.
This is an investment in whats keeps them alive.
Ok full disclosure, I never really cared for PERL, I was always more of a Python fan myself.
But has there really been that much real effort in the PERL community? In its hay days during the Late 90's and Early 2000's there was a lot of PERL Development, but it seems it has dropped off and PERL lost its shine. I am asking because I am more of a Python Fan and I haven't been really involved in PERL apps. But back in the day every time you tried to find an open source program to do something it required PERL... Not so much of this any more, is it because I have changed how I look for software or is it because PERL is no longer as popular as it was before.
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
Troll much? You can always tell a made-up complaint because it describes a situation nothing like reality, and has a tone of venomous contempt that is excessive given the situation. People with no money to buy the item? Ok, maybe some people low-ball you but I have found that is easily curtailed by stating. "SERIOUSLY NO LOW-BALL OFFERS PRICE FIRM" on the ad. As for scams I get about 5% spam response rate on most things. They are super-obvious. Guess what. I click delete. I also get several offer emails usually and can only sell to one person! OMG, the horrors of selling something for free.
"sometimes he felt that his whole life was a dream, and he wondered whose it was and whether they were enjoying it."
Considering the role Perl (and the other software products they use) has in their business, it seems like a very small sum of money.
Had they purchased commercial software from Oracle, IBM, Microsoft etc. to solve this task the price would have been a two-digit million-dollar figure. And probably a bunch of additional millions on top of that, for more iron to run it on.
We should praise them for this step, but at the same time be aware that they got away REALLY CHEAP by this action. Hell, the marketing buzz it generates is probably worth half that amount by itself!
- Jesper
My security clearance is so high I have to kill myself if I remember I have it...
Does this mean, "Beat up old computer geek seeking perky young beauty queen", will someday elicit the correct queen or is that not a Perl issue?
Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
These articles will avoid mathematical notation in favor of Perl 5.
I'm not so sure it's an improvement... but thanks, it's an interesting article. I'm parsing it right now.
Non-Linux Penguins ?
Obviously 100K is much better than nothing, but it's difficult to see the odd 100K donation making much difference to a software project of the scale of perl. At the same time it's easy to demonstrate how much OS projects like perl are contributing to the economy. Perhaps after a few more SOPA-like victories the IT industry will feel empowered enough to lobby the government for some taxpayer money to support critical web infrastructure maintenance/development.
What do you mean a "successful enterprise"? Craigslist is not an enterprise. It's a charity. It charges no money for its services. Neither the posters nor the viewers pay. It displays no ads. It survives on donations. You may not think of the people it helps as being in need of charity, but the modus operandi of Craigslist is that of charity. So this is just one charity giving money to another charity.
Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
Craigslist is open source? Anyone have a link to the source?
Sorry it doesn't work for you. I've found multiple places to live on Craigslist. I've bought things, sold things, and given away things for free. It's a classifieds section, not an AppStore, and Craigslist works very well for me on those terms.
well done craigslist. they are giving back to the community, as everyone should do, in a way or other. thank you craigslist (:
the only crticism here... is perl itself. i wish it was some community better than that kludge
my sig pwns your sig
Perl is where JavaScript used to be at version 1.3 -- version 1.4 was on the horizon, it was supposed to change the language radically, add packages, type system, etc. However, 1.4 was killed and 1.5 was born. 1.5 was a small incremental update to 1.3.
Perl 6 is never going to make it (yes, I've looked at it recently) so the community should let it die and start Perl 7 instead. Perl 7 should be for Perl 5 what JavaScript 1.5 was for JavaScript 1.3. It should add 1) classes using MooseX::declare syntax 2) autoboxing @arr.push( $elem ) instead push @arr, $elem and 3) and maybe a few syntactic enhancements that everybody is going to love such like chained comparisons or while @arr -> $x, $y
We know (thanks to CPAN modules) that those work.
Should I know what is craiglist? Looking at craiglist.org reminds me of a moderately NSFW domain parikng page. "Women seeking men", etc. Complete with crappy translations and all. If I was running Windows, I'd be starting the virus checker right about now.
This may be an ignorant question, but . . .I think of Google as perhaps the company that has most profited from free/open source software. I presume they make contributions through development channels (e.g. LKML); I don't participate in the development of anything Google cares much about, so I dunno whether they do, but I presume they do. But have they ever donated money to any free/open source software projects?
when something I write generates the type of cash like that so I can make a financial contribution the best programming language ever devised q:)
http://www.gibby.net.au