Are those comparable, though? My model of open source is that it prototypically looks like someone building something that’s useful for themselves, then other people also find it useful and help to work on it (with code, bug reports, feature requests). But that first step doesn’t really exist for LW2, because until you’re ready to migrate the whole site, the software has very little value to anyone.
Can you think of any open source projects where the first useful version seems comparable in effort to LW2, and that had no financial backing for the first useful version?
Edit: some plausible candidates come to mind, though I wouldn’t bet on any of them. Operating systems (e.g. Linux kernel, haiku, menuetOS); programming languages and compliers for them (e.g. gcc, Perl, python, Ruby); and database engines (e.g. postgres, mongo, neo4j).
(Notably, I’d exclude something like elm from the languages list because I think it was a masters or PhD project so funded by a university.)
I also think it’s just… actually rare and noteable when an open source project is able to succeed on this scale, rather than something you should expect to work out by default.
Are those comparable, though? My model of open source is that it prototypically looks like someone building something that’s useful for themselves, then other people also find it useful and help to work on it (with code, bug reports, feature requests). But that first step doesn’t really exist for LW2, because until you’re ready to migrate the whole site, the software has very little value to anyone.
Can you think of any open source projects where the first useful version seems comparable in effort to LW2, and that had no financial backing for the first useful version?
Edit: some plausible candidates come to mind, though I wouldn’t bet on any of them. Operating systems (e.g. Linux kernel, haiku, menuetOS); programming languages and compliers for them (e.g. gcc, Perl, python, Ruby); and database engines (e.g. postgres, mongo, neo4j).
(Notably, I’d exclude something like elm from the languages list because I think it was a masters or PhD project so funded by a university.)
I also think it’s just… actually rare and noteable when an open source project is able to succeed on this scale, rather than something you should expect to work out by default.