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Ed Gadziemski wrote: Do you earn a decent return from selling your paid components and support for open source components or is that business just a sideline to your main income source?
I never earned anything from them, and based on the interest I had on them, I couldn't have survived if my income depended on them in fact I turned them open source after realizing I was going nowhere, so at least they could serve me as a project to showcase my abilities (or lack of ). Just note that mine didn't compete with anyone, and only until recently Microsoft began offering something similar to my E Drawing Library (Win2D).
Ed Gadziemski wrote: Is it no longer possible to compete against the "big boys"? Is market disruption impossible in the component market?
I think it's possible, you just need a good offering (at least matching theirs), a good price (low enough price so you can compete, but not look cheap) and a lot of evangelization and marketing with a lot more of evangelization and marketing, ah, and did I mention that you need a lot of evangelization and marketing?
Ed Gadziemski wrote: There is indeed a market for a good online store system. The existing choices all have serious shortcomings. I have considered competing in that market. Of course, income to live on while doing so is a concern.
There are some open source online store systems that are pretty good and know to everyone like Magento, Prestashop, etc., even using plugins you can turn a Joomla site or Wordpress blog into an e-shop, i'm not expert on those systems, but if yours kick their asses, then go for it.
Ed Gadziemski wrote: I have also considered turning just the product management portion of my back-end software into a commercial offering. It imports catalogs from online stores such as Yahoo Merchant Solutions and allows single-location management of all product data, producing exports to different advertising channels such as Google Products and Amazon Marketplace.
Perhaps if you can turn your backend into a plugin for the aforementioned systems, you may sell it for them, then offer a fully integrated premium solution with your own e-shop system.
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RafagaX wrote: Perhaps if you can turn your backend into a plugin for the aforementioned systems, you may sell it for them, then offer a fully integrated premium solution with your own e-shop system.
That's a very good idea, and one I hadn't considered. I'll look into it. That would certainly be a quick way to gain entry to the market.
Thanks,
Ed
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Why doesn't it work with Vodafone?
I always like to keep a backup phone in case the new one breaks.
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
Any organization is like a tree full of monkeys. The monkeys on top look down and see a tree full of smiling faces. The monkeys on the bottom look up and see nothing but assholes.
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Don't know - it just never did. It wasn't locked when I bought it, it just refused to accept Vodafone sims - Orange, EE, and Virgin all worked, but not Voda.
I can't keep the old one as a backup any more: I moved the number to the new one, so gawd knows what it would try to do!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Odd, maybe HP isn't that stupid after all.
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
Any organization is like a tree full of monkeys. The monkeys on top look down and see a tree full of smiling faces. The monkeys on the bottom look up and see nothing but assholes.
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They are a sort of "anti-Apple": they come up with brilliant ideas and then entirely fail to market them.
(Whereas Apple don't come up with anything new and market the heck out of it!)
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Maybe 20 years ago HP hired a new head of marketing, somebody from a big consumer products company. This hire was reported in the Wall Street Journal, along with a quote from an HP leader along the lines of "we are so terrible at marketing that, if we sold sushi, we'd market it as cold, dead fish"
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Please, please, please send it in to the site that offered "up to £0.04", I want to know exactly how much they actually pay for it. I am even willing to reimburse you for any difference between the £0.04 and the actual price given, just so I can find out.
Try Hovercraft for Android, voted "a game" by players.
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The last of the big spenders, I see!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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If the ringer is easy to get to with a soldering iron I think you have the makings of an IED but I wouldn't advertise that as a feature on eBay.
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Here you can send your old phone to someplace that does whatever to them and donates the proceeds to a children's hospital. You could be last of the big donators 
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Vodafone stores used to contain a recycle box. The phones got sent to people in emerging markets that can't afford them.
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I've had it for about 20 years, but at least it gone to a friend who is going to tidy it up back to show condition.
Now my man shed looking a bit bare. So I might look for another classic bike. Not British this time, maybe jap.
Any ides? And please don't mention hardly movingsons
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Aren't you going to hold out for a jet-pack?
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Maybe for a daily flyer. But I wouldn't trust myself to tinker round with it... 
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Vincent Black Shadow.
Will cleanout your wallet, but what the heck.
Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello
Any organization is like a tree full of monkeys. The monkeys on top look down and see a tree full of smiling faces. The monkeys on the bottom look up and see nothing but assholes.
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awesome bike, but I'd never find one here. Not sure if they ever made to New Zealand. That and the Lamborghini will just have to stay in the dreams.
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An old friend of mine recently tried to do Route 66 on his Vincent HRD Rapide Series A. He broke a conrod about half way and the bike is now in a friend's workshop somewhere near Toronto.
He paid a little over a million dollars for it.
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Now that's about a million more then I can afford
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He bought it because he brother was p!ssing him off since he'd bought a Series C. 
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CB750F1? It's a classic (if not a lot of fun to ride in modern traffic, the brakes are ... um ... poor).
Honda Black Bomber?
Kwak H2? (Lobotomy required)
Yamaha LC250?
Or if you are feeling adventurous, an SS900 Ducati? You'll need good mechanical sensibilities and aptitude!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Id have to admit a Honda cb750 k2 or similar is very high on my list, even the cb550, however I hear they have a neutral between every gear when they were new. Would love a six cylinder CBX but hard to find a original one now and getting pricey
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I got "stuck" on CB550's for a while - every time I changed bikes I seemed to end up with another one - must have had half a dozen or more.
Stiff suspension, so with good tires (I used H-rated Pirelli Phantoms) they went round corners pretty well - particularly without the stock exhaust which grounded out far too quickly and weighed a ton!
Can't remember that many false neutrals, not until the mileage started to get over 75K and things got a bit sloppy (when one of mine would change down for you if you closed the throttle going up hill )
Front brake needs frequent attention - stupid sliding caliper which seizes far to easily - and the oil filter bolt rounds off often (typical Honda of the era: all screws and bolts are made of an adamantium core with a cream-cheese outside for the tool to grip)
Oh, and the camchain needs to be cared for - it gets expensive if you ignore a rattle!
Other than that, good solid bikes!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Good info. Thanks. I more interested in doing something up then doing high mileage and hence just be used for the occasional pottering round. It probably take me a few years just to do that!
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