I have projects. Games that were in the google play store. One had hundreds of thousands of downloads. Then Google pulled it as I didn't maintain it. But, I have to pull artwork out, sound effects, etc that can not be included. And that's just time. I don't have much of that, that's due sure.
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Maybe my idea is stupid, but what if ask for help? It may be possible to find programmers willing to help.
Because their code is a mess, ugly and full of bugs, that is better burn to the roots that trying to fix it.
It would still be nice to look at how someone did something even if implemented poorly to make redevelopment quicker.
As for why people don't do this they might just not care or believe they will maybe get back to it again someday even if that is years in the future.
In addition to other reasons already given, commercial software may contain licensed code, libraries, assets, trademarks, and other IP that cannot legally be given away for free, or under an open source licence.
Sure, it may be possible to strip those things out, but that may leave the software broken or fundamentally changed, and it may be a significant amount of work to do, which am author or publisher is not likely to spend on abandoned software, especially if their free release would compete with any current products.
It's probably unmaintained because they don't care any more, or don't have the time. If they don't care or have time, they are not going to spend the effort and time required to open source it and publicise that fact
Because I don't want people seeing my terrible code
Isn't there bad code in the free software world?
I remember the news when Dwango company decided to open source the Toonz program.
On one of the forums I read a lot of criticism about the quality of their code.
But no one will deny that this is a useful program for artists, even if the program code is not very good.
@Slow It's most likely due to they rather delete there files before they think "Oh, I can just release this on GitHub or something Publicly for people to use my code" or due to being apart of a company that is very protective of its property or it's due to feeling they may come back to the project in the future and improve it.
Additional question: wouldnβt it be cool to have a place where you can only get open source stuff? Obviously there needs to be more to it than this fact i presume but its a start.
I can't tell whether you're joking or not, but if you aren't: https://f-droid.org/
Oh! I didnt know that was OS only! Thanks for lmk!
You can also download Droid-ify instead for a nicer interface (backend is still F-Droid)
Lol like
- F-Droid, izzyondroid
- Linux repos
- Git* (Gitlab, Github, various instances)
- Sourcehut
- Codeberg
- random neckbeard Git website
XNViewMP... the dev is basically gone, but they are opposed to OpenSource. XNViewMP is even a QT showcase project, and with opensourcing its features could be easily split up, converted, UI modernized, Wayland adapted etc. Its easier and faster than GIMP, especially for batch image converting and all that. Its great software.
Feels like this comes right from /r/comicrackusers
Maybe you could find some answers if you have a look into apps that actually did what you suggest and see how they did through time. Comes to my mind, for example, Astrid, a to-do app that became FOSS after a good run in the early android days.
It's called Tasks now (in case anyone is looking for it).