In my continuing quest for a decently full-featured graphics editor that hasn't succumbed to feature bloat, I recently installed Paint.NET for the first time. I'lll admit that I had low expectations based on the abysmal user interfaces I've experienced in other open source projects. Imagine my surprise when Paint.NET turned out to be.. well, incredibly freaking great. Not only is the UI actually friendly, modern, and easy to use, but the whole thing is so polished: the installer, the website, the tutorials and forums. It's the complete package.
But enough of my gushing about how great Paint.NET is. Last year, I declared December 1st "Support Your Favorite Small Software Vendor" day.
Check your hard drive, and I'm sure you, too, will find some bit of software written by a small software development shop, maybe even a single developer. Something you find incredibly useful. Something you rely on every day. Something you recommend without reservation to friends and peers. Something that makes using the computer that much more enjoyable. Or at least less painful.Stop reading this post right now and buy that software. If it's not commercial software, don't let that stop you. Share the love by sending money to the person/shop/organization that created it.
This month it's MediaMonkey. Next month it might be ClipX, or Beyond Compare, or RegexBuddy, or TimeSnapper. It's time to stop floating by on the "free" version and give something back. If I can't come up with the scratch to spend a measly $20 a month supporting the very best work of my fellow independent software developers, can I really call myself a professional software developer? Can you?
As a Windows user, I work extra hard to avoid reinforcing all these negative stereotypes. I believe in the little guy writing cool Windows software. And by "believe in", I mean "pay". And so should you. Whatever operating system you choose to run, try to support the little guys writing the apps you use. We owe it to them. And, more importantly, we owe it to ourselves.
I've set a goal for myself, and I intend to stick to that goal. Whenever I encounter truly excellent software, I vote with my wallet. I pay them. Paint.NET is an open source project, though, and it can sometimes be difficult to figure out how to vote with your wallet when there's nothing to buy, and nobody to pay.
But look how easy the Paint.NET project has made it for me. The install dialog provides a gentle, unobtrusive link for me to "show my appreciation and support future development". That's exactly what I want to do.
The donation page is similarly helpful, providing one-click PayPal donation buttons for common currency types-- along with the snail mail address if you're old school.
This is yet another way Paint.NET demonstrates that it is a thoroughly professional open source project. It raises the quality bar, particularly in the .NET ecosystem, where open source is often a second-class citizen.
Life is easier for commercial projects-- they have to ask you for money. But open source projects don't -- so they often have no provision for payment of any kind. That is a mistake. If I want to vote with my wallet, make it easy for me to give you my money. Set up a clearly marked donation page, and pre-populate it with brainlessly simple, one click methods to donate. If you don't want my money, that's fine too. Just tell me what charity I can donate to on behalf of your project.
I think it's hugely important to ask for donations on any non-commercial project. Not everyone can contribute time and effort. Help us help your project. Let us vote with our wallets.
(Speaking of contributions, yes, I am still planning to donate $10,000 to open-source projects in the .NET ecosystem. The money is set aside and earmarked. I'm sorry it has taken so long to set up, but I promise that it will happen by the end of the year.)
Good luck on this venture! I hear from colleagues that it is an extremely useful tool!
volcano vaporizer on July 12, 2009 6:34 AMNeat way to make Donations simpler and easier. Thanks
Omer on July 13, 2009 2:46 AMSoftware is good, I enjoy using it.
Juice Plus Vitamins on July 16, 2009 11:54 AMThanks for sharing these info with us! I was reading something similar on another website that i was researching. I will be sure to look around more. thanks...
legal steroids on July 26, 2009 2:15 AMi the donations the way you did but I still only get USA donations.
Den on July 30, 2009 6:04 AMI agree that if a small company or one man band has taken the time to write a piece of software that makes a task easier for you then helping to pay for their development time is a small price to pay and shows your appreciation for what they have done.
Beads Stalk on July 30, 2009 1:58 PMDonations are cool for everyone, I think its very important..
Viagra on August 3, 2009 7:19 AMThanks a lot!
It is very important and useful information!
Thanks and keep up the great work. Greetings from GERMANY an have a nice day!
auslandsversicherung on August 10, 2009 2:39 AMwere is my comment?
auslandsversicherung on August 10, 2009 2:39 AMis not so cool to pay donate
i think so
all the best lanyards
This is much better as you know what clicking each button will do whereas the generic dialog takes a second for you to think "Umm what does clicking yes do?" also thanks for sharing this cool topic.
xtCommerce Templates on August 13, 2009 11:28 AMI've been using Dexpot (http://www.dexpot.de/index.php?lang=en) for a while now. They haven't had a release since from I've seen, but it still a solid program. There are some added bonus tools like rolling a window up or minimizing to the system tray.
Sean Patterson on February 6, 2010 10:13 PMI think the Paint.NET guys recognized that the installer is one of the most important things in any software distribution, and they really nailed it. For instance, instead of the ridiculous "you have to uninstall the old version to install a new version" thing that MSI installs do by default, the upgrade takes care of it.
Jon Galloway on February 6, 2010 10:13 PMI'm in Malaysia, and only a young student. I find 20USD really hard to keep up with to donate.
However, it's a bit ironic because 80% of the stuff I do on the computer is on small bits of open-source freeware programs. Having a really old computers makes up for it.
Some which I just have to mention: FileZilla, PSPad, Code::Blocks, Blender (not a small program actually), Firefox (kinda counts).
Dion Moult on February 6, 2010 10:13 PMits not always like this that the software developed by a single person or a small software company makes you computer more enjoyable or less painful.even the software developed by large companies could cause you head ache. I suggest that you should go for a better argument to sell your product. i m not saying that your product in not useful, its the way that is not right. because first your project should earn vote then it comes to donation.
Craigslist Chicago
yes its good.I agree on everything except the open-source bit. Yes, Paint.NET is open in the sense that you can take a look at the code.
craigslist
this article about paint net software which is very nice and strong software but the problem is that it is out of access because its too much costly in this sense i wait till it comes on normal price really appreciate able topic
craigslist arizona
paint net is open source project its really very powerful software but the problem is that it is out of access because its too costly to buy i think i will wait till its price comes down really great approach after informing such article
craigslist on August 17, 2010 11:03 PMpaint net is open source project its really very powerful software but the problem is its too costly to buy so i think wait to buy it until its price comes down really positive approach by you
Craigslist Buffalo
I haven't had much success in getting any body to donate $$$. I have heard tall tales of people who make alot of money this way off of a successful wordpress plugin, the those stories are few and far between.
Mike the term life quotes guy
Mike on September 15, 2010 12:27 PMThe comments to this entry are closed.
|
|
Traffic Stats |