Den 01-08-2012 20:32, Jason H skrev: > Would I? > > I'm no expert at making money, however I think that if there was an > organization staffed with people who could modify Qt and interested > companies that companies could contract for the desired modifications. > The problem is playing nice with the open governance. And you could also > offer sponsored development projects. Heck, use some crowd funding to > cooperatively bust through some barriers. True, companies could contract > directly, but they would have to be more hands-on and if there was a > company they could centrally manage development so there is no overlap > during simultaneous projects.
It's difficult to really do this for several reasons: 1) The open governance is great for everyone using Qt, but it makes a Trolltech business model more difficult. You can't just promise anyone to get code into Qt anymore. It's still possible, of course, but you have to argue the case for the code. 2) Digia has the right to sell commercial licenses. This means a *big* chunk of the revenue stream Trolltech had is gone. I haven't heard anything about this reverting right to Nokia so others could pick it up. 3) The copyright of the code is still Nokia owned. This means you can't do anything with Qt that's not GPL or LGPL. So another possible revenue stream - selling custom developed close source versions to customers - is also gone. Those three were big parts of Trolltechs business model. There are still some left - for example certifications. Anyone can set up a certification system, the trick is convincing people it's worth anything. I have all three Qt certifications from Nokia, and you would have a *really* hard time convincing me I'd need one from you. What you have left is something I do every day in Fionia Software: Qt expert contracting. All the things you have left is about coding - either on Qt itself or with Qt. And that's the definition of what we consulting companies do. It's very much a possibility that the consulting companies will be the biggest commercial driving force behind Qt. If you look at the numbers of git commits (excluding Nokia), that's already the case. Digia is far behind. And now KDAB and ICS is hosting Qt conferences this winter. In this scenario, we'd be working in a pure open source project where there would be no benevolent dictator. That's still a viable and working model. Meaning even if Nokia goes poof today, Qt will still live. And possibly even better than today - impossible to know. Bo. > On Wed, Aug 1, 2012 at 8:08 PM, Jason H <scorp...@yahoo.com > <mailto:scorp...@yahoo.com>> wrote: > > Anyone else feel like starting a company called TechTroll and giving Qt > > another shot? > > > > On 02/08/2012, at 4:00 AM, Mark wrote: > >> As far as i know, only the part to sell support/licenses has been sold > >> to Digia. The development of Qt is still in Nokia's hands. Please do > >> correct me if i'm wrong. > > > > The development of Qt is in qt-project's hands. > > Sure, you just need a big pile of money to do that ;) Bo Thorsen, Fionia Software. -- Expert Qt and C++ developer for hire Contact me if you need expert Qt help http://www.fioniasoftware.dk _______________________________________________ Interest mailing list Interest@qt-project.org http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest