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Perhaps I can raise a hypothesis about one possible future
business model. For every software there will be two groups of users: Those who will pay, and those who will not. Let's call the first group the "preferred" users and the others - "the public". The preferred users will be a group of people or corporations who need the software very much and want to take an active role in its design, so that it will suit their needs very closely. They will also receive it slightly before the others for beta testing. Most of those willing to pay will probably be corporations, not individuals, and they will form some kind of "consortium" that will define what the software should look like (e.g., "What features would we like to have in Acrobat 7.0?"). The software company will simply work as a coordinator and service-provider for the consortium, doing the actual development and coding. All coordination could be done through the internet, including the formation of the consortium itself. The members of the consortium will have to decide how to divide the costs of the development among themselves, but after the software is released, it would be free for the public to use. Naturally, the process will be open for every hacker or expert to express their opinion during the design and testing. The key idea is just that the potential users will be the ones who will actually define the specifications, not the software vendor. |
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