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Businesses Open Source Programming Software

Startup Assembly Banks On Paid, Open-Source Style Development 33

enbody writes A year-old startup, Assembly, is built on the premise of creating products using open-source style development, but structured in a way that you get paid for your contributions. Open-source development is well-known in the Slashdot community, as are a variety of ways to earn a living around open-source, such as support. What is new here is being paid as part of the development, and not just for coding — your contribution might be as project manager or sales. A nice description with video showed up today on the Verge. Of course, the devil is in the details, but they have products so someone in Slashdot land may be interested. (Bias warning: I know one of these guys.)
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Startup Assembly Banks On Paid, Open-Source Style Development

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  • Wow that was a hard headline to parse! "What's a start-up assembly bank, and why is it on paid, open-source development?"

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      Why you have difficulty? Easy reading I can do for you, look! Is bank for assembling startups get it? Is open, turned on electricity, and paid job for you lookers of career get it? Is source style development no funny business! Great opportunity! Do not miss ok? Good for you.
  • Nothing breeds trust better, right? Assembly [assembly.org] is almost as well known as assembly [wikipedia.org] in programmer circles; and the first one is also an assembly in the dictionary sense. I think this slashvertisement might not end up as well received as the advertiser wished.
  • Sorry somehow i could not get a list of products without signing up.

    And there are no written examples on the html5-web2.0ish HP.

    • You can bypass the sign-up by using this link [assembly.com], but it's not exactly obvious (bad UI design, or if it's "by design", they hope to collect your email address by making it non-obvious that there's a back door that doesn't require you to join first).

      Remember, they want their ~10% "platform costs" (gross, not net revenue, so it comes off the top). So, you create an app, the app store takes 30%, Assembly takes 10%, and they can, as per their terms of service, sell the product out from under you at any time (so,

      • Facebook only reuses crap you post on Facebook. These guys want the right to use anything you do ANYWHERE. That's a real over-reach. You should have some say in how your name, image, and words are used.

        Such an overreach it's not even legal in the US, let alone most other places in the English-speaking world.

        .. and here's the poisoned term:

        You can tell from their terms that the site was founded by some recent lawyer graduates and their scummy MBA friends. The recent lawyer graduates think they can write any terms they like and just because it's written down, it's legal. Their scummy MBA friends think wildly lopsided terms is a great way to make money. They got their MBAs from the Comcast School of Monopolistic Practices. They don't

  • I noticed people fighting over FOSS vs proprietary philosophies a long time ago. They acted like these two are all there is. I posted this essay arguing there's a large variety of models with some combining proprietary and open source: https://www.schneier.com/blog/... [schneier.com] One of the first mainframes, Burroughs B5000, was sold quite profitably with the customers getting the source code and able to extend it however they wanted. They could also submit changes back to Burroughs to include for everyone. The cont

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