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11 votes
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LumiThera raises cash for medical device that uses light to fight vision loss
4 votes -
Alaska defunds scholarships for thousands of university students ahead of fall semester
18 votes -
Alaska fears 'brain drain' after forty-one percent proposed cut to university system
12 votes -
Sofar Sounds house concerts raises $25M, but bands get just $100
7 votes -
The saga of "Star Citizen," a video game that raised $300 million—but may never be ready to play
19 votes -
“I felt like it was a betrayal, and we had raised funds on a false pretense”: The Correspondent’s first US employee speaks out
13 votes -
WFIRST faces funding crunch
4 votes -
The two sorts of new Air Force One jets will cost nearly the price of a Nimitz Class carrier
8 votes -
How did/do you fund your graduate education?
If you're doing a master's or a PhD, how do you pay for it? Or if you will be doing in near future, how do you plan to pay for it?
7 votes -
Why open source projects don't charge (while keeping the code open)?
I'd gladly pay a reasonable price for professional packages/support for programs like Emacs/Melpa, Debian, and Xfce. As a user, I empathize with the complaints by developers that are constantly...
I'd gladly pay a reasonable price for professional packages/support for programs like Emacs/Melpa, Debian, and Xfce. As a user, I empathize with the complaints by developers that are constantly overworked. Even if this doesn't generate enough money to pay for everything, it might be enough to hire someone to handle the issues and communities, something that clearly drains their efforts, especially because programmers tend to prefer technical challenges rather than dealing with people.
I understand that many projects accept donations, but I think providing an actual reward (even if its something minimal, like an updated package instead of having to build it from source) might be a good way to get resources and avoid developer burndown.
11 votes -
Trump Administration blocks US funds for Planned Parenthood and others over abortion referrals
15 votes -
I was wrong about Google and Facebook: There’s nothing wrong with them (so say we all)
23 votes -
Patreon, Kickstarter and the new patrons of the arts
10 votes -
Is science stagnant? Despite vast increases in the time and money spent on research, scientific progress is barely keeping pace with the past
12 votes -
Katharine Viner: 'The Guardian's reader funding model is working. It's inspiring'
15 votes -
Seychelles issues world’s first blue bond to fund fisheries projects
3 votes -
NDIS funds to be 'repurposed' for drought relief under Australian PM Scott Morrison's plan
2 votes -
Netflix plans to raise $2 billion in new debt to fund content spending
7 votes -
Scientific publishing is a rip-off. We fund the research – it should be free
28 votes -
The other political correctness: America's elite universities are censoring themselves on China
11 votes -
State of California funded research must be public within one year
15 votes -
Elon Musk’s funding for Tesla wasn’t so secure
13 votes -
TSA looks at doing away with security screening at 150 smaller airports in US
15 votes -
How in 2015, $364 Billion flowed through two and four year public universities and colleges of the states of the USA
4 votes -
Mozilla funds top research projects
7 votes -
Capitalism is ruining science
28 votes -
NIH ends alcohol study, citing funding, credibility problems
3 votes -
Let's talk about that annoying thing we all don't want to think about: funding.
Tildes does have bills to pay. The donations are open, but I'd like to go beyond the basic donations for a moment. Right now, tildes has server costs, and also the lead developer (Deimos) is...
Tildes does have bills to pay. The donations are open, but I'd like to go beyond the basic donations for a moment.
Right now, tildes has server costs, and also the lead developer (Deimos) is donating his full time to the project rather than working for someone else. He can't do that forever, so if we want him full time, we need to get him paid by the non-profit. In the future, that cost is probably going to expand to larger server costs, multiple developers, possibly community managers and other staff - though nothing ridiculous like reddit with 300 people doing marketing.
When we talked about funding, we wondered if we could get all users to toss in one dollar a month, and if there were enough users (millions) even reduce that to one dollar a year. Now that we have a lot of new people here, I'd like to ask what everyone thinks of those funding ideas, and if they have any other good ideas on how to raise money to pay for whatever tildes' costs are.
66 votes -
Chat with Rob Walling, founder of Drip, serial entrepreneur
5 votes