Bounties: Difference between revisions
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This is something that's been done by CodeWeavers for the wine project, mostly by corporations who wanted certain features. Legal Aid Manitoba had CodeWeavers make their application Childview work on wine for $2,000. Walt Disney paid them for work as well. |
This is something that's been done by CodeWeavers for the wine project, mostly by corporations who wanted certain features. Legal Aid Manitoba had CodeWeavers make their application Childview work on wine for $2,000. Walt Disney paid them for work as well. |
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=== Issues === |
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It is hard to gauge the effect offering bounties will have on a development community, especially one such as OLPC that relies on some sort of intrinsic motivation for development. Louis Villa wrote [http://tieguy.org/blog/2006/06/18/crowding-out-of-intrinsic-motivations-aka-the-bounty-problem/ crowding out of intrinsic motivations], a review of literature related to the effects of offering/charging money in certain situations, specifically in relation and response to GNOME's [http://web.archive.org/web/20040605075206/www.gnome.org/bounties/ bounty program] (no longer active). |
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Revision as of 20:25, 30 June 2008
There are a few different takes on how to use bounties to encourage work on specific projects, or to share support from specific organizations.
Specific ideas:
- Bounties for awesome (highlighting specific projects/problems)
- Summer of Content (projects and mentors)
- Bounties for coding projects needed
Background
Past project experiences
Sources for bounty info: Google for trac bounties
- libsecondlife Bounties - offers USD and Linden-dollars
- Tinymail Bounties (none currently)
- Dr Queue Bounties (Wiki-based none currently)
- Gnome bounties (archive, no longer done)
What to consider: rules, eligibility, project length, bounty size, incremental updates
This is something that's been done by CodeWeavers for the wine project, mostly by corporations who wanted certain features. Legal Aid Manitoba had CodeWeavers make their application Childview work on wine for $2,000. Walt Disney paid them for work as well.
Issues
It is hard to gauge the effect offering bounties will have on a development community, especially one such as OLPC that relies on some sort of intrinsic motivation for development. Louis Villa wrote crowding out of intrinsic motivations, a review of literature related to the effects of offering/charging money in certain situations, specifically in relation and response to GNOME's bounty program (no longer active).