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by kyeb
1529 days ago
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There are some legitimate concerns about Warp throughout these comments (telemetry, business model, etc.). But the one thing that really excites me is to have a full team working full-time on building the terminal that developers want to use. They're doing real user research, talking to developers, and taking feedback in forums like HN seriously - and using up millions of VC-dollars building a new version of this fundamentally important core utility. I'd much rather have that VC money go toward an attempt at a better terminal than some ML or web3 startup. I think this doesn't usually happen? All the terminal emulators I've used usually open-source projects developed in someone's free time. Don't get me wrong, projects like Alacritty, urxvt, xterm, Terminator etc. are amazing for the funding they have (I think mostly $0?), but I'm super excited to see what a cohesive terminal based on real UX research can look like. |
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It's nice to think of this as 'taking advantage of' VC dollars, but VC dollars come with strings attached, namely the need for an 'exit'. The exit only happens if the company in question makes multiples of what it invested, meaning that VC-funded companies need significant revenue from their users. These days, the growth required for an exit leads to: 1) advertising being laced into a product, 2) user data being sold or otherwise monetized, or 3) charging you a monthly subscription fee.
Maybe this time it's different—there are theoretically other VC-friendly business models that work for software—but I struggle to see how.
Open-sourcing the application from the beginning would certainly give more confidence here.