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When vBulletin becomes fully commercialized
When vBulletin becomes fully commercialized
It will mark the end of a great product. While I realize that I am just a drop in a bucket, I have complete confidence that commercializing modifications on vb.org will mark the beginning of the end for a great product. Although vBulletin is currently a leader in bulletin board technology, there are others not so far behind. The biggest appeal which prompted me to purchase and pay for vBulletin was entirely wrapped around this community and the open source style modifications it offered. Although some people seem to think that mods will still come in free flavors afterwards, believe me that selling them will be the ultimate goal for every coder. The results will be the junk mods would be available and the useful ones will all fall under the eminent fee structure. When this happens users will drop vBulletin in favor of alternate softwares who still support open source modification communities. It's a step backwards for vBulletin as a whole because it will stimulate focus on alternate products and we all know how easily things can change in this industry. It's a shame to say the least that vb.org has taken this path. This place was the reason I purchased a vBulletin license to begin with. PS. I looked for another place to voice this but the topic was closed :surprised: |
Let me clarify 1 thing vBulletin.org is a place for free modifications, that is how it is now, and that is how it will stay. We will not be hosting any commercial modifications here.
As a small "gesture" towards those who have commercial products, we will in our current plans however implement a link directory, where authors can rent advertising space for their commercial work. The exact requirements to get listed and how we will implement this are not known yet. |
I don't think you need to worry that all coders will become commercial. I have no intention at this point of selling my mods. I have moved to a premium support model because of my time limitations, but if I write code, I generally share it for free. I don't plan on changing this. I will still share my code with my fellow coders here because that's part of the fun of writing the code.
Amy |
I don't charge for any of mine and never will - they are not 'big' enough to make that a viable option - nor do I have the time to provide commercial level support.
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Let the market bare what it will. I have no problem purchasing quality add-ons to vBulletin if they are worth the value. In the last week, I've purchased add-ons from vbSEO and The Geek without so much as a nanosecond of regret. IMHO, what I got was worth what I paid and was a hell of a lot easier than trying to develop it on my own.
Hacks are okay, but I like to have the option of going commercial for features that I consider critical. |
No, what everyone is going to be getting from there on out is a "lite version" of a hack, and telling pepole to upgrade to a full version for "x amount" to enable all the features
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You pay for vBulletin. You don't pay for people to spend their time developing something for free and this site has never worked in an OpenSource way. There is a difference between OpenSource and VisibleSource.
Small hacks are released here by alot of coders who have larger commercial products. The reason I chose to go commercial with P3tz was because of the overwhelming amount of vb.org users who wanted immediate support for a free product. Alot of my time was wasted repeating the same stuff because a member "can't be bothered" to read through an X page thread. You can't take, take, take. People say "well if it was good I'd donate". That isn't what happened for the 3 years I was here before P3tz. |
We're not stupid. Good quality free hacks need to be released in order to drive business to this site, so we can sell our paid hacks. Not every hack is worth selling commercially, too. Plus, the higher support standards and the entry fee imposed by vb.org on paid hacks will likely be enough to keep most hacks out of the paid directory.
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No one is implying anyone is stupid, hambil. :) As for the Paid Directory, are you implying that there will be a fee of some sort? Going one step further does this mean that vB.org is going commercial too?
Where I'm going with this I don't know... |
I'm hoping there's a fee. If people are going to make money off of this site, they should be paying Jelsoft for advertising space.
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Um, no. I just think that if people are going to make money off the members here, then they need to be paying for that privilege. Just like I make people who run ad banners on my site pay for them.
And, since Jelsoft pays the hosting costs for the server, I just figured it was an approriate place for the money to go. For all I care, it could go to a good charity. Amy |
I certainly hope they charge a fee. Otherwise coders who put a lot of work into commercial hacks will have their work burried under what amounts to spam (IMHO).
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I would rather pay for something like this. Otherwise it would just be a spam forum. You need to be able to have some control over what is listed and what isn't.
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And I also say that I've boght hacks from coders present here @ vb.org because I think they worth it. |
I'm certain there are coders who do not have that desire. First, the hacks have to have marketing value; secondly, the coders have to be business oriented; and third, requiring a fee to use the hacks will turn a hobby into work. Not all things have money attached to them.
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And would also(well hopefully) require that the hack be 100% supported for each and every uses problems (not saying they arent now, but you have to admit, there are some here that are just posted and left)
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I for one won't release anything major here for that reason. I enjoy coding, but I don't have time to support releases, and I will just be letting people down; so instead, I will my give my products/support to those who can compensate me for it. I have great respect for the people who can be patient enough to do this (or have enough time). Not everyone can though. Wanting money isn't always a bad thing; it pays the bills. The warm-fuzzy feeling doesn't. People need to pay bills. I am disgusted by this thread. People are releasing things from the goodness of their heart, and are being overwhelmed by the demand for more, and to make matters worse: lack of respect. Remember one thing: you paid for vBulletin. Not the coders. We are a plus, one that has been taken for granted lately. We are customers... just like you. If you want the community to continue to thrive, you must become part of it. -- Anyway, back on topic. If vB.org does implement a paid hack directory, there are a few things that I'd like to see: -A reasonable fee (I'd rather it be high than low!) -Hosted support forums -A bug tracker -User feedback This would be for the user-end of course, they don't want to be signing up on 100 boards to receive support. This is supposed to be the ultimate vB resource, so let's make it one. I won't be too concerned if we never implement this, but if we do, let's make it count. Oh and, to charity! :) |
I doubt it will be more then an advertisement list.
I don't think we will ever host support forums or bug trackers. That is something the coder must provide if he wants to run a business. |
Thank you for your comments Adrian. It's nice to see somebody who gets it.
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Once there are paid hacks though, for them to be on vB.org i beleive they should have to support them 100% of the time for each and every user that requires it. This is also when it becomes more then a hobby. |
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So, this being the case, many of us would have to do without, due to circumstances beyond our control? hmmmmmmmmmm... Quote:
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I think everybody has financial priorities. I would love to have a new freezer in my home, but don't have money for it. I don't expect somebody to give it to me for free though.
And, if somebody were to offer me a free one, I certainly wouldn't expect them to help me install it, use it, or repair it if it broke. That said, most of us code for ourselves. And, since we've done it anyway, we share with the rest of you. That won't change if paid mods are offered here. But, the sheer number of you guys now make supporting all the free stuff prohibitive. So, keep that in mind when it comes to the freebies. It's a free freezer. After that, you're on your own. :D |
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How do you come up with such good analogies :D |
Lots of practice :D
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So let me get this right, commercial hacks will be asked to pay for advertising space further increasing there price? This is supposidley the ultimate vbulletin source, I would expect to be able to find both paid and unpaid hack links..
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Generally yes that would make sense, but I also see the stand point that if you have to pay to get the link then you will not pay the price for every random useless hack, but ones rather that are really worth the price you have to pay to sell it to others, sort of like a quality control. So personally id rather see it as a pay to display type area.
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Not everyone will make that assumption with hacks. In fact, I'll go one step further and suggest that most users expect support to be given by the authors. People will have questions regardless of what the author states and it shouldn't stop other people from helping if they can. Now there is a (supported) checkbox for authors to click but it simply does not grab the attention of the users. Would it be practical for hacks to be separated into 2 categories: Supported and Non-Supported? A second suggestion is an agreement that must be clicked by the users before they have access to non-supported hacks. These are just two examples. |
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Those that are strictly focused on developing and marketing paid products - and I have no problem with that - should pay a higher rate. We are nothing more than a target market to them. |
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I know that a lot of them wont do it, but a lot more will like to make profit out of it. sorry for my english |
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This is a community; we should be sharing, not just taking. I may be a little bit of a hypocrite, having released only two minor modifications here, but I will always take the time to help others. My advice to many of you who are slightly disappointed: Learn. I did. Many others here did. I was once a noobie asking for help with even the simplest things, but after a little practice I was able to learn to do things myself. Nearly two years later I am coding in all my spare time and still loving it. If you have the time, go for it, and I bet you won't regret it. You may even end up helping others here, continuing the cycle. To anyone who has helped me in the past: I thank you. |
As I see it, "free" modifications are very important as many, if not most, communities don't exactly turn a profit and some don't make any money at all. So their Admins don't have piles of cash to throw into development.
Having said that, if a person is going to charge for their hack, then I feel it is only reasonable that they should kick back some of that money into the ongoing costs of running vBorg. If I sell something on EBay they get a cut, why should vBorg be any different? |
its just like cubecart the shoppign cart system most of the good add ons are commercial now
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