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Gun.io Debuts Free Group Funding for Open Source Projects

51 points| Mizza | 14 years ago |gun.io

21 comments

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[+] bad_user|14 years ago|reply
Offtopic, but there's something really off about Gun.io

Looking at their listings under Freelance / Open Source, the prices offered for those gigs are not even laughable, but an insult, even for developers from third-world countries.

So am I missing anything? Do I need to be logged-in or something?

[+] jollyjerry|14 years ago|reply
Always happy to see projects coming out of my hometown. I like the idea, but I hope that there's good moderation for submitted bounties so it doesn't become another Rent-a-Coder like cess pool. It's also be neat if the bounties could be free form, so people could barter goods and services. Personally, being offered $50 is worse than not being offered money at all for something that I'd want to work on. On the other hand, for some tasks I wouldn't mind if someone were willing to trade me design work, or treat me to a lunch or a beer.
[+] Mizza|14 years ago|reply
(I'm actually a Berkeley transplant, only moved here 3 weeks ago from Boston!)

The bartering goods and services idea is interesting, but it seems to only work for local things. The one thing I think would be interesting to use that for is for tutoring. I'd teach somebody Django if they could teach me Node, etc..

[+] rgarcia|14 years ago|reply
I could see GitHub adding this in the future, e.g. instead of simply voting on/+1ing an issue, let people attach bounties. Is there proof, though, that this is something people want? It seems like Kickstarter has the "funding for big projects" thing nailed--I'm just wondering if there's really demand for "funding for small features"...
[+] tectonic|14 years ago|reply
There are projects that Kickstarter does not accept.
[+] cobychapple|14 years ago|reply
"Winner takes all" implies that many more people will lose out.

Don't get me wrong: I think that gun.io's approach is potentially a great way to get worthwhile stuff done on open source projects, but I'm also slightly sceptical that this might see a 99designs-style model infect people's mindshare more than it already does.

[+] sgricci|14 years ago|reply
The Gun.io creator posted several bounties previously, which are still up. Including several which are fixed or have fixes in his GitHub pull requests (for LightWrite).

They haven't been closed so I assume the bounties haven't been paid. I get bad feelings about this.

[+] Mizza|14 years ago|reply
Remedied! There was one pending claim which I was still testing. The other gigs have not had people actually submit claim requests for yet. I am a 'single founder' - lots of stuff to be done, that one didn't get sorted before you saw it.

The hang up is that the people who claimed them didn't realize that international payments aren't supported yet, unfortunately. (This is still is causing some communication problems. I wish I had a better payment solution. I have tried to make the language more clear.)

[+] sethbuzz|14 years ago|reply
Is the point of this to fund project like kickstarter? Because I think what the FOSS community needs are much smaller, less marketable fixes and bounties. Like 'port django to python3' not 'write a new FOSS video editor'.
[+] rwolf|14 years ago|reply
The first subheader of the linked article is "Kickstarter for Open Source?"
[+] iamwil|14 years ago|reply
I'm glad something like this exists, but the ramp up time to learn each project seems way more effort than what it's worth for some of the bounties that are being posted.
[+] czam|14 years ago|reply
Guess that's the perfect reason why it should exist: People who are already involved in existing projects could look out for low hanging fruits and that would be a win-win. The site could implement a project alert.
[+] omouse|14 years ago|reply
They should multiple payment methods, such as BitCoin.