The Arcive of Official vBulletin Modifications Site.It is not a VB3 engine, just a parsed copy! |
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#41
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Personally, I created all my hacks for my own forums, and I may have a lot of time on my hands, but I actually enjoy posting them here for free, giving support for them, getting comments and upgrading them with more features. I'm very much of a beginner at this thing, so I need the practice and criticism, anyway.
Why are you worrying about vB.org becoming fully commercialized? I think there will always be plenty of codes who just do it for their own purposes and think they might as well post it here. Not everybody would charge for their work if they did it primarily for themselves. |
#42
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however, once it goes beyond that and into a legitimate support issue or for a major modification i see no reason why the author can't make money off of it, but as amy and others said, if they're gonna make money and treat it like a business then they should be treated the same way and that brings in the fee. you can't post here for free and then make money. pay to put your "business" on display. you're making money and you're supporting your mods. everyone winds up happen. the author gets the cash, the user gets the support and vb.org gets the money for allowing it all to happen (which i agree some should go to jelsoft). ok so i'm long winded. i know this. i just think there's been alot of extremes said here and only a few see the gray area or the proverbial middle ground. i think partial commercialization can work and work well if done correctly. |
#43
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One of the gray areas is definitely support... Here are my views if a hack becomes popular and the author can no longer handle the workload:
If the hack IS supported The author should do one of the following:
All of those are decent solutions, depending on your position. Hopefully you picked up on the sarcasm on 1. If the hack is NOT supported The user downloaded it knowing (his own fault if he didn't see the supported box unticked) that it is unsupported. It is not the authors resonsibility. |
#44
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I'm sure this has already be said, but most hacks here are not big enough to be considered a commerical hack. That all depends on the demand of support and code really. If you have a huge hack that 1000's of users will use, then you could consider having a commerical site for that hack because the demand in support is to much for a simple thread to handle.
I've always seen alot of users going commerical to make a few quick bucks, but really if you ever want to go commerical with your hack. You should ask yourself a few questions.... 1. Will 1000's of users use this hack? 2. How far can I really extend this hack? 3. Will the support for this hack really be to overwhelming for a thread to handle 4. Does my hack really have enough code to be marked as a commerical product This is mainly why I've never opened a commerical site for my hacks. I havn't really created anything I would really consider to be a commerical product. I simply enjoy coding, it's fun and a great learning experiance. I could understand why one would open such a site because of the demand of individual support that is required. TheGeek is a perfect example, he doesn't charge users for the code and the features the product comes with. He charges a small fee for greate individual support. Anyway, thats just my $0.02. |
#45
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#46
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#47
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I don't see how anyone could remove their hack and make hacks paid retroactively either |
#48
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Talent, I suppose... lol
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