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by jraph
902 days ago
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> Open source isn’t a magical bandaid though it may get you some early traction, the same you can get by having a free plan. I'm with you on this. You need to carefully plan. I also strongly believe you should not go with VC money. That excludes "burning money and we'll figure it out later". Your open source project will therefore probably start as a side project and/or with government help dedicated to business creators. > Most successful open source companies would have been successful as closed-source I believe this too. Now, there are more and more things that require open source products. Open source companies, including the one I work at, have received funds from openDesk [1] to develop a complete suit of open source tools. More and more research labs, universities and public institutions require open source. So there's a dedicated market that's growing. You may succeed as a closed source company, probably more easily than as an open source company. But the story is not that clear cut, and it also depends on what you want to build and whether you really want to build that awesome product as closed source. [1] https://www.openproject.org/blog/sovereign-workplace/ |
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