Startup Assembly Banks On Paid, Open-Source Style Development
enbody writes A year-old startup, Assembly, is built on the premise of creating products using open-source style development, but structured in a way that you get paid for your contributions. Open-source development is well-known in the Slashdot community, as are a variety of ways to earn a living around open-source, such as support. What is new here is being paid as part of the development, and not just for coding — your contribution might be as project manager or sales. A nice description with video showed up today on the Verge. Of course, the devil is in the details, but they have products so someone in Slashdot land may be interested. (Bias warning: I know one of these guys.)
If you want paid open sores development, why not just go to your mother?
Are we taking bets on how long they have before they get sued over the name?
https://www.assembla.com
Do you know?
Don't you mean "voluntears"?
It's always so much fun to parse Slashdot titles, especially ones that use America's ridiculous capitalisation.
Oxymoronic but this is slashdot.
Does this amnesty apply to all aliens? Extra-terras included?
Wow that was a hard headline to parse! "What's a start-up assembly bank, and why is it on paid, open-source development?"
Oh boy. If we want to find out anything about the company, searches for "assembly", even when narrowed to the field of computing are going to return a lot of unrelated hits. For all I know, Assembly runs donkey shows for priests in Tijuana. That's it! They chose the name on purpose to bury that story.
Nothing breeds trust better, right? Assembly is almost as well known as assembly in programmer circles; and the first one is also an assembly in the dictionary sense. I think this slashvertisement might not end up as well received as the advertiser wished.
Why do I get the feeling that "Open-Source Style" means that the source is not the slghtest bit open?
Even if you're going to pick a common word, it is another mistake to pick a word that has a commonly understood meaning specific to that industry. If the had picked any random word, such as Donkey, they could defend a trademark for Donkey programming or Donkey software. Can't quite claim a trademark for assembly programming - assembly programming has been around for decades.
Sorry somehow i could not get a list of products without signing up.
And there are no written examples on the html5-web2.0ish HP.
> searching the whole site, I was unable to find a single example of a successful "assembly." Not good after "a year of operation."
I saw two of four projects were turning a profit, which would mean paying dividends to contributors.
I saw two of four projects were turning a profit, which would mean paying dividends to contributors.
They withhold amounts for chargebacks, any services they provide ("platform costs") , etc., which is why they only agree to pay out "net profits", and reserve the right to not pay out until your individual contribution is worth $100.00 or more. The music industry is very good with playing with "net profits."
What I did find was crap like this:
This is a recurring bounty that will go to anyone who tweets about Helpful.
Here's a sample tweet, but you can use any one you'd like. Then, just paste the link below and you'll be awarded some...
"Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
I noticed people fighting over FOSS vs proprietary philosophies a long time ago. They acted like these two are all there is. I posted this essay arguing there's a large variety of models with some combining proprietary and open source: https://www.schneier.com/blog/... One of the first mainframes, Burroughs B5000, was sold quite profitably with the customers getting the source code and able to extend it however they wanted. They could also submit changes back to Burroughs to include for everyone. The continued and significant funding ensured the system kept getting improved. The openness has many of the benefits of FOSS. They later closed the source like QNX did, but I could see a contract where the customers get the current and future source indefinitely so long as they pay. So, it's nice to see a new venture that challenges the false dichotomy of proprietary, FOSS, or nothing else. There's lots of mixes. I look forward to seeing how this scheme works out.
Give up 10% and my ownership rights for a website where mediocre people can network? Nah, I'll pass.
Either the source is open, or it isn't. Here they pretend to open the source, but as soon as people use it in any way, they will "enforce your[*] Intellectual Property Rights" "FOR ANY OR NO REASON". Fuck that.
[*] meaning their, since you have to sign over your soul to them