[quote=āhsoftā]Please guys, have you read my link about Fairware? Iām telling you that the āmoney/open sourceā problem is something that I think can be addressed. Why keep answering ābut open source means no money / hobby developmentā?
That being said, itās re-assuring to know that Jon would rather see ST being open source than to see its development stall. However, I still think that thereās a danger similar to TextMateās death for ST. If ST makes a lot of money without any work on Jonās part, then he has no incentive to either work on it or make it open source. Will he stay true to his principles? I hope so, but for the user, itās still a risk.
Now, please, tell me stuff like āyour Fairware thing canāt work becauseā¦ā, but not stuff like āopen source means no moneyā.
BTWā¦ I tried ST alpha yesterday. Itās pretty cool. Rough edges (of course) so I canāt replace TextMate yet, but coolā¦[/quote]
Because, generally speaking, open source means no money/hobby development.
ListenāI respect your view, but I think youāre wrong. I think many users are fair. I think most users areā¦lazy. And cheap. If thereās an easy download thatās free, theyāll do it. If there is no easy download thatās free, but an easy way to pay ,then many will take it (the iTunes effect). I think that there are many, many developers out there who donāt care about intellectual property despite their avocation. An open source version would siphon a ton of sales, even if thereās no downloadable binary (we are developers after all, we can get it built). And a downloadable pirated binary would become available anyway; heck, it will be available even as things stand now. Thereāll be a ton of demand.
I will say that developers are probably more sensitive to annoying DRM than others; I could imagine (hypothetically) some sort of draconian copy protection that would do more harm than good. But a guy thatās offering completely unrestricted betas does not exactly strike me as the guy to do something like that, so Iād give it long odds. (By the way, thereās an easy mark for the people who wonāt payājust grab one of the unrestricted betas! Works great!).
Perhaps most importantly: itās an issue of control. Jon, thank goodness, seems to be taking extreme care in how his creation is being crafted. Have you seen Notepad++ lately? Itās good for what it is, and has tons of features, but it doesnāt have people raving about it like TextMate (and now, Sublime Text). The way it goes right now, Jon has every bit of control over his interpretation of what a text editor ought to be like. Happily, I rather agree with him (and apparently most of you do, too).
I have every bit of confidence that should Jon not wish to make money from ST any more, he would open source it. No, I donāt know him. He doesnāt know me. Iām just not that concerned, though. I respect those who are concerned, but I just canāt bring myself to tell someone to give away their work. You want to invest all that time and make it open source? Great. Just donāt insist that others do the work and release it on your terms.