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Re: Left high-and-dry by Nokia/Ovi store :(
Nokia is a big corporation, and it's clear that some parts of it are inflexible. Even though Nokia seems to be changing in the right direction, it might take years to get to where we want to be, by which time the battle for developers will be lost.
So let me propose something completely different, starting from these assumptions:
We operate a service (which I'll call "Premium Maemo Apps", just for the sake of this discussion). It's a subscription service - let's say $25 per year, the same amount as a Flickr Pro account. In return for the subscription fee, the customer gets unlimited access to the "Premium Maemo Apps" repository, and to a set of support forums. The Premium Maemo Apps repository is filled with open source apps. There's no DRM. Personalization of the apps is allowed (e.g. the title bar could say who bought it) but because it's open source there's nothing stopping people removing that. The service comes with a Premium Apps Manifesto which is a list of things that make the apps trustworthy: open development, no trojans, no spyware etc. This is the unique selling point of the service. Of course not just any open source Maemo app would be accepted into the service, so there would need to be a review process. And where do the subscription fees go? Some is used to operate the service, and the rest goes to the developers. How is it split up? Obviously some algorithm must be worked out, which should be kept simple and transparent so that people spend their time developing and supporting their software (and therefore growing the size of the monetary pie) rather than arguing endlessly about who gets what share of a smaller pie. Regards, Roger PS: This is not just empty waffle. I operate uclue.com, a paid Q&A/research service which aggregates the services of individual researchers and pays them 50% to 70% of what the customer pays to Uclue. I can see many analogies to how a Premium Maemo Apps service could operate, paying a proportion of the subscription fee to the app developers. |
Re: Left high-and-dry by Nokia/Ovi store :(
If you're posting free software, what stops someone simply pulling the software from your 'premium' repo and reposting it in maemo-extras?
In fact, other than charging 25 USD a year, how does this proposal differ from maemo-extras? |
Re: Left high-and-dry by Nokia/Ovi store :(
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I am registered self-employed and thus have a tax ID i believe. I could also apply for and receive VAT registration from HMRC. Having both of these things I would be able to sign up to Ovi, and commercially sell my aplications through the Ovi Store. If that is the case, then that is entirely reasonable. If being registered self-employed and VAT registered is not enough, then that is a pile of pants. Have i read this correctly? |
Re: Left high-and-dry by Nokia/Ovi store :(
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this sentence suggests that single developers trying to publish commercial software are not a priority... Quote:
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Re: Left high-and-dry by Nokia/Ovi store :(
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Re: Left high-and-dry by Nokia/Ovi store :(
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So I'm this guy who is employed. In my spare time I'm developing some applications for the N900. [Okay, this isn't true, I didn't take non-free into account: As I am not into OpenSource, I cannot put those through Maemo Extras (or what it is called now)] But I'd like to offer them for - say - EUR 0.99 somewhere - that's where the ovi store comes in. Quim said that the Tax ID is used to make sure, that the person somehow is trustworthy. Guess what: In Germany every person has a Tax ID which doesn't change during the lifetime of that person. Or does it have to be a VAT ID? That means that I would have to incorporate myself besides already being employed by someone, which adds a nice overhead when doing your taxes. Sorry, in my view that still is broken, even if I can understand, that Nokia doesn't want to take liability for breaches through software in the ovi store. |
Re: Left high-and-dry by Nokia/Ovi store :(
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Re: Left high-and-dry by Nokia/Ovi store :(
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So yes, parts of my post above are moot. Thanks! |
Re: Left high-and-dry by Nokia/Ovi store :(
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What stops people pulling the Creative Commons music from Magnatune.com and reposting it elsewhere? Absolutely nothing. But Magnatune appears to still be in business. What's to stop people getting water from a tap instead of buying it in a bottle from the store? Absolutely nothing. But somehow the supermarket shelves have a profitable "bottled water" section. Quote:
2. Access to the support forum, where customers will get knowledgeable support, often from the developers themselves. And finally, there are actually some people who think that paid-for software must be better than free-of-cost software. Strange but true. Regards, Roger |
Re: Left high-and-dry by Nokia/Ovi store :(
@eiffel
I like the idea and your points are very good. I still hope that ovi store would be sorted and usable for maemo developers. I think the "maemo premium apps" idea could be hard to get to the end users without direct support from nokia (like having the link or app or whatever is needed included in the firmware) |
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