Thank you Moritz!
* Moritz:
Hi Nikos,
On 4/09/21 08:53, Nikos Alexandris wrote:
Dear Moritz, dear All,
(as a user) I wonder if this new way can facilitate to "sponsor" work on
specific issues/user-needs.
Vero suggested the following change in the email text:
"... and sometimes pay developers to work on important but tedious bug
fixes and enhancements."
So, yes, this is a possibility.
Indeed.
In example, in issue https://github.com/OSGeo/grass/issues/1616, Maximilian
Stahlberg would like to be able to catch signals (i.e. SIGINT) with(in) a
Python the script to perform on-demand tasks such as reporting the current
status. He proposes a solution as well. Say a developer is
interested in fixing
this and he sets a cost for it. The user decides to sponsor this
specific work
and things happen.
There is a big difference (just in tax law, for example) between a
user paying specifically a developer to develop something, or the
GRASS GIS community deciding to spend some of its budget (of which
parts stem from donations) to pay developers for certain tasks (and
before y'all get you hopes up too high: our budget is in the (few)
thousands of €, so not much that can be paid).
The keyword 'community' is inedeed important -- the community is not a
private or else for-profit acting entity.
How can we help a user find someone that will dedicate to fix something?
Like I wanted to get https://github.com/OSGeo/grass/issues/1203 this
investigated and fixed. Or, say, I am willing to pay someone to help me
get it fixed. How can such a request be brought up, where?
(My highest hopes: each issue in GitHub features a 'Sponsor' button
(like the GitHub Sponsor button) and anyone can make an offer. Offers to
be reviewed and accepted or refused.)
Would this be something worth considering for the GRASS GIS
development team?
This has been considered and the idea was put out there to decide on a
budget to spend and to organize some sort of community vote on which
bugs/features we should pay for. However, nobody has taken the lead on
thinking it all through and organizing it practically.
Is there a way actually to connect https://opencollective.com with
https://github.com/sponsors? GitHub has already an account
https://opencollective.com/github.
OSGeo has a github sponsors account
(https://github.com/sponsors/OSGeo), so people can also go through
there if they want to sponsor GRASS GIS (should probably be mentioned
in the email). AFAIK, however github sponsors have to pledge a regular
amount / month. It is not really made for one-time donations.
No, GitHub Sponsors does one-time donations too. Please check again if
of your interest.
I'm not sure I understand what your aim is in linking
github.com/sponsors to Open Collective.
Hmmm... brainstorming how things can be linked together. Maybe not a
useful sentence.
N
_______________________________________________
grass-psc mailing list
grass-psc@lists.osgeo.org
https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/grass-psc