| bio | website | sprovoost.nl |
|---|---|---|
| location | Utrecht, Netherlands | |
| age | 31 | |
| visits | member for | 2 years, 9 months |
| seen | May 12 at 23:24 | |
| stats | profile views | 2 |
Ruby on Rails and iOs developer and entrepreneur. Usually in The Netherlands, but I'm sometimes found in Hong Kong, Silicon Valley and other places.
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Jul 25 |
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Why don't make a Pay version of stackoverflow? @adam-davis can you point me to a few of those books? I know from books like Predictably Irrational that mixing paid and community support is a risky idea (although Linux is partially built with paid labor), but I'm not so sure if a fully commercial peer2peer system wouldn't work. |
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Jul 25 |
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Why don't make a Pay version of stackoverflow? @abe-Miessler experts exchange seems to be a one-sided market, which means the company decides which topics they cover. They also don't share the answers with the general public. |
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Jul 25 |
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Offering actual money as a bounty? I agree that dispute resolution risks being very expensive. Escrow can solve part of that problem, so does having clear rules about how a question should be phrased and how an answer is considered correct or incorrect (the latter two being useful in a free system too. |
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Jul 25 |
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Offering actual money as a bounty? These sites usually work with a "post job" -> "review candidates" -> "pick candidate" -> "wait for result" -> "pay candidate" workflow and they (at least Elance, $50) have minimum project sizes. A competition system, where the person asking the questions picks the winner (if any), is much more efficient for the person asking the question: "ask question" -> "review answers" -> "pick winner" -> "pay". Reviewing answers is also much faster than reviewing candidates, because others with the same question are helping. |
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Jul 25 |
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Offering actual money as a bounty? That's a valid concern, but it's only an hypothesis. I'm not familiar with any websites when you can offer rewards for crowd-sourced tech advise. Either they tried and failed, in which case you're probably right, or nobody tried. I think bad behavior can be discouraged. You can detect unreasonable down-votes and spamming. |