Who's a "Corporate Sponsor"? - Mailing list pgsql-advocacy
From | Josh Berkus |
---|---|
Subject | Who's a "Corporate Sponsor"? |
Date | |
Msg-id | 200412031038.57335.josh@agliodbs.com Whole thread Raw |
Responses |
Re: Who's a "Corporate Sponsor"?
("Marc G. Fournier" <scrappy@postgresql.org>)
Re: Who's a "Corporate Sponsor"? ("Joshua D. Drake" <jd@commandprompt.com>) Re: Who's a "Corporate Sponsor"? (Peter Eisentraut <peter_e@gmx.net>) Re: Who's a "Corporate Sponsor"? (Jussi Mikkola <jussi.mikkola@bonware.com>) Re: Who's a "Corporate Sponsor"? (Chris Travers <chris@metatrontech.com>) |
List | pgsql-advocacy |
Folks, We've been laying out a new "Corporate Sponsors" page on WWW for the new web site. However, some debatable issues have arisen on who "qualifies" to be on the page. We've agreed, there, on listing: 1) Any company that sponsors a PostgreSQL major contributor's time; 2) Any company that has contributed a feature or significant add-in since 2000; 3) Any company which pays for or donates infrastructure resources for the project. The issues that aren't clear are: 1) do all mirrors get listed? 2) does documentation "count" as much as code? 3) do add-ins count if they are completely externally hosted? 4) If yes to (3), do they still count if they are not OSS? Since scrolling space on our web page is not exactly a scarce resource, I'm inclined to say "yes, yes, yes and no". It benefits *us* to list as many companies as possible, because it shows how widely used and supported PostgreSQL is to potential new users. So we have little incentive to be "stingy" with listings; for the same reason, I wouldn't suggest "expiring" companies unless they go out of business. The reason for the last "no" is that vendors of commercial software, no matter how closely tied to PostgreSQL, are not "contributing"; they are at best complimenting Postgres for mutual benefit. It also removes some "incentive" for companies in the "PostgreSQL space" to OSS their software, which of course we want them to do. However, before you give an opinion, you should be aware that under that set of rules, Elein's company Varlena LLC would not be listed with "corporate sponsors", despite providing the quite valuable "General Bits". While very useful, 100% PG-oriented, and free, GB is "all rights reserved" and hosted entirely at Varlena.com. I'm bringing this up not to pick on Elein -- especially as GB could change its status at any time per Elein's post: http://www.varlena.com/GeneralBits/ -- but because this "borderline" situation is liable to arise again. We already had something exactly analogous with CommandPrompt's online publishing of Practical PostgreSQL; again, useful to the community and free, but externally hosted and not OSS. This issue would apply equally if, for example, EMS HiTech offered pgExporter under a free shareware license. It would be nice, useful, popular, but still not a "contribution". So, opinions? -- Josh Berkus Aglio Database Solutions San Francisco
pgsql-advocacy by date: