That way the author can still keep the source closed and those who want code can pay for it.
I very rarely see OSS being monetized successfully without a community fork destroying the original project.
OSS still requires money to maintain the project and sparse donations really don't really cut it.
That way the author can still keep the source closed and those who want code can pay for it.
I very rarely see OSS being monetized successfully without a community fork destroying the original project.
OSS still requires money to maintain the project and sparse donations really don't really cut it.