Tag Archives: 2013

Mailpile

In early 2013, Geary asked for $100,000 to build a mail client and stalled. Six months later, Mailpile did the same and the world could hardly hand over money fast enough. The difference? Edward Snowden.

…OK, there are a few other differences. Like Geary, Mailpile promised a Gmail-ish sleek design with fast search. While Geary is a GNOME app (which is not necessarily an exciting prospect for Windows or Apple users), Mailpile is a web-based client.

The Mailpile team of 3 is based in Iceland. Their fun campaign certainly struck a chord, as they reached their target well before deadline. During their campaign mail host Lavabit shut down rather than comply with a request to turn over their private security keys to the FBI.  They had so much money pouring in that Paypal froze their account. Undoubtedly the extra coverage from that event didn’t hurt, either. As well as hundreds of individuals, Mailpile won support from many companies as well.

From the start the Mailpile team had their eyes turned towards the long-term. Donating $23 or more made one a member of the Mailpile community. These members

get to have a say in the long term direction of the project. When we aren’t sure what features to work on next or need to make some other major decision, we will seek input from the Mailpile Community…. This is the Mailpile business model. As long as members of our community are willing to fund development (we will ask you to renew your membership in a years’ time), we will dedicate ourselves to Mailpile and build the secure web-mail client you want.

Summary

  • Campaign: Indiegogo
  • Campaign date: 2013-09-10
  • Campaign status: successful
  • Campaign backers: 3639
  • Campaign raised: US$163,192 of 100,000
  • Project type: prototype
  • Project license: AGPL, Apache

Outcomes

Their website lists the current status of development of various features. Their roadmap written shortly after the close of the campaign listed January 2014 as the goal for an “alpha release”. Their alpha release was launched on February 1 at FOSDEM (although it still requires installing from source) and on their website have hosted a demo.

Commentary

Geary

The campaign for a “beautiful, modern” (Linux) desktop email client was widely loved and publicised. It was also consistently seen as “too much” with a target of US$100,000, the company’s response that that was the cost of quality software seemingly not satisfying many. With the Snowden NSA revelations occurring later in 2013, it is tempting to speculate that the same campaign would rapidly succeed if launched today. Was Geary merely ahead of its time?

Adam Dingle is a software developer with a vision for usable media applications on Linux. He founded Yorba, a small company which writes desktop applications for GNOME, funded by donations and consulting fees. Yorba’s first hit was with photo organising software Shotwell, which is now the default option in Fedora and Ubuntu. In May 2012 they released Geary 0.1, a distinctly modern looking (that is, Gmail/Apple-ish) email application. In March 2013 they launched their crowdfunding campaign (and still found time to release Geary 0.3).

The timing of their campaign seemed fortuitous, with Google announcing the shut-down of Google Reader in the same month serving as a reminder of the capricious nature of commercial web-based services.

Throughout the campaign donors asked: why $100,000? Why so much? The boring answer that that is what the salary, tax etc of three developers would cost, didn’t seem to satisfy many. Others questioned why Yorba had used Indiegogo rather than Kickstarter. Eric Gregory commented that

A lot of it came down to payment systems. At GUADEC last year we talked to a number of people about Kickstarter and the consensus seemed to be that nobody likes Amazon Payments — especially outside the US.

Since IndieGoGo uses PayPal it seemed to be the “lesser of two evils,” so to speak.

During the post-mortem, Yorba stated that

First, it’s important to understand that the Geary campaign was a kind of experiment.  We wanted to know if crowdfunding was a potential route for sustaining open-source development.

For Geary, the answer was sadly not. However Yorba continues to experiment with funding open source – in November 2013 they posted a bounty for someone to backport Geary 0.4 to Ubuntu 12.04, which a developer claimed a month later.

Summary

  • Campaign: Indiegogo
  • Campaign date: 2013-04-24
  • Campaign status: unsuccessful
  • Campaign backers: 1192
  • Campaign raised: US$50,860 of 100,000
  • Project type: prototype
  • Project license: LGPL

Outcomes

Yorba did not set a timeline for releasing 0.4 if their campaign was successful. Instead they promised the following features:

  • Fast searching
  • Always-on notifications
  • Support for all major IMAP servers
  • Save and auto-save drafts
  • Transparent GPG integration (digital signing and encryption/decryption of messages)
  • Calendar integration
  • Google Contacts import address book

During the campaign, Yorba promised that they would continue to work on Geary if the campaign failed but could not promise the same outcomes:

Well, we still have a little gas in the tank and can keep working on Geary.  We won’t have enough time to develop all of the above features, however, so it would be a pretty limited subset of them.  In fact, it may only be a couple, plus some bug fixes.  That may be about it.

After that — who knows?  There’s a lot of possible futures and it’s not worth speculating which one will develop.  In any future, it’s hard to see continued aggressive development of Geary without further funding.

The 0.4 release arrived in October 2013 and included search and autosave to draft, of the above list (as well as many other features and fixes). OMG Ubuntu called it one of the best Linux applications of 2013 and “one of the the best mail apps on any platform, Linux or otherwise”.

Commentary

Schema migrations for Django

Django is the go-to Python web framework, with South a plugin for Schema migration. This campaign was to put the next generation of schema migrations directly in Django core, essentially a rewrite of South. It was funded within a matter of hours. The campaigner is a Django core committer, and the original author and principal maintainer of South.

Summary

  • Campaign: Kickstarter
  • Campaign date: 2013-05
  • Campaign status: successful
  • Campaign backers: 507
  • Campaign raised: £17952 of goal 2500
  • Project type: existing
  • Project license: BSD

Outcomes

TBC

Commentary

By the campaign author: