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I think we're reaching a point where because of the unreliability of the two major platforms there may be a path for developers to go the Youtuber route and start Patreon to fund development. You already see this in certain genres of games (notably adult content) that are typically just hidden on stores.

I can certainly understand the reasons behind simply abandoning ship at this point. If it's not worth it, it's not worth it.

My only hope now is that Thunderbird on Android will approach the quality without adding any heinous anti-features.



I suggested that in the forum too. I support quite a few developers through patreon, paypal subscriptions or Github: Calibre, a lot of mister devs, Karabiner Elements (Tekezo), Scummvm (Eugene Sandulenko)

From what I've seen from comments of supporters on patreon, the community tends to be much nicer to the dev than typical forums. It's always strange to me that people who don't want to pay tend to be the worst when it comes to support and politeness.


> From what I've seen from comments of supporters on patreon, the community tends to be much nicer to the dev than typical forums. It's always strange to me that people who don't want to pay tend to be the worst when it comes to support and politeness.

I would say that it is rather that only a small fraction of people pay, and those are usually the most satisfied users anyway to be willing to pay for the additionnal features. The platform has little to do with it.


Oh yes, I don't mean that's specific to Patreon the platform. It's just that in my limited experience dealing with a not that popular opensource software and dealing with support for an old school shareware back when that was a thing, the most entitled, the least friendly and the most aggressive emails were all from people who didn't donate, didn't pay or didn't contribute to the code (in the case of my opensource project).

And once you help them, they're not necessarily going to donate either or try to help in any way (a big percentage of those problematic users have the mentality of not paying for software ever). So filtering support to only supporters is a good way to stay sane as a developer and stop dealing with negativity.


This already exists in things like Liberapay. I've seen many projects using it.




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