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Tuesday, 29 May 2010
On the verge of creating an open source version of the InDesign portfolio piece, I had a phone call from someone who wanted to know what sort of value you'd be willing to pay for such a thing.
I told him I'd pay £15 for it - and he asked if I'd be willing to pay £20, and £30. And so the pricing question was thrust into the early stages of development, something I was glad to get out of the way early on.
For most of the project, I stuck with the £15 amount - but I'd at one point dropped it to £10 (to hit what he'd quoted to me) and found it didn't feel right.
Today, with the first version almost ready to be released - and a few bits left to do - I decided to put the pricing back up at £15. And I asked some friends to try it out.
I'm not going to tell you that there's some crazy, conspiratorial cause to do this (there isn't). It's just that I feel my new understanding of the value this app provides - combined with my ongoing conversations with some of my friends about the value of doing things for free - has given me a bit of context into why I'd do things this way.
When I first created the application, I was very clear that I wanted to create something that was as little as I could. An app that doesn't exist elsewhere in the world. Something you could use in your work, or for your business, or in your side-projects. Something you could put in your pocket and take everywhere, and use for anything.
I'm not proud of the fact that this meant I had to start thinking about pricing a little earlier than I'd expected. It's not like I'm spending the better part of a year on the app, or like I don't have any other projects to work on (I do), but it's always made me feel a little odd to be doing things for free in this day and age.
But I don't believe that everyone should be paid for everything. I don't believe that it's an inherent human trait, or something you should feel guilty about.
I believe that there are a lot of things in the world that don't deserve to be paid for. Everything from writing books, to going to the doctor, to learning how 01e38acffe
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Category:Indonesian state universitiesA Llandudno man has found himself in the bin after a friendly game of darts turned into a heated argument.
28-year-old Adam Patrick, of Park House, was arrested at a boozer in Rhos on the Isle of Anglesey last week after Welshpool Magistrates heard the fight was sparked by a chance meeting with a former school mate.
When the fight broke out, Adam was given a ticket for possessing offensive weapons and resisting arrest.
His solicitor had to say it was a case of mistaken identity when he went to court on Monday.
He said: “Adam had arranged to meet a former schoolmate from his old school in Rhos.
“He said they spoke briefly at the boozer and they were not at one another’s throats.”
He said Adam was arrested, taken to Caernarfon police station and charged with assault and failing to comply with police officers.
He said: “The crown said Adam was in possession of a screwdriver which he had to explain to the court.”
The court heard that when Adam was arrested he was in his pyjamas.
He added: “He has no prior convictions and said he had a good character.”
He was given a conditional discharge for six months and ordered to pay a £100 fine and £85 costs.
You can contact the editor at [email protected] or call 03771-514-44l. You can follow the Northern Echo on Twitter @GnPulse and like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/gnpulseLeggett Inlet
Leggett Inlet () is an ice-filled inlet wide, extending southeast from the South part of Crown Glacier, along the northeast coast of Alexander Island, Antarctica. It was discovered and photographed from the air by Lincoln Ellsworth on November 23, 1935, and was named
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