cross-posted from: https://lemmy.abnormalbeings.space/post/83295
Text version of this video:
https://thelibre.news/kde-board-member-nate-graham-announces-for-profit-company-2/
I like the news, but I very much dislike the thumbnail. It’s very misleading and click baity. It makes it sound like Nate is making something about KDE for-profit.
Yeah, his videos and articles are usually insightful - but his thumbnails are often weirdly bad. For example: for the one about “Does Mozilla get USAID taxpayer money?” (Actually, not really), he unfortunately used the headlines of the article he was criticising, making it seem his video would argue the same point as the (false) article did.
You’re absolutely right about his video. I really like them and watch all of them, but the clicks/views gluttony adds a bad taste to them.
Only skimmed the article, I don’t understand how this works: There are for-profit companies that hire devs to work on open source projects? Are they earning money with something else or how do they make money from this?
There are for-profit companies that hire devs to work on open source projects?
Tons of them, yes. Most big companies you know even - Google, Facebook, Amazon, Apple, RedHat/IBM, Valve, Intel, AMD, even NVidia.
Are they earning money with something else or how do they make money from this?
Some of them do support contracts (RedHat), some make money with data server services (Amazon, Google), some sell hardware and the software is drivers, or an incentive for people to buy more hardware (Intel, AMD, NVidia).
In Tech Paladin’s case, Valve uses KDE software on their Steam Deck, so they want it well maintained, features they like added and bugs they care about fixed. To make that happen, you have to either hire people yourself, or pay another company to take care of it. Valve does the latter with a lot of the open source projects they use.
My guess would be tax breaks or something, especially if the work is going towards a non-profit
Ah, ok. Yeah, that could be it, I was wondering why they don’t just hire the devs themselves …