Well, as part of a group of three that have spent well over 1500
dollars on modules, we've made a collective decision to not *ever*
*ever* purchase a module w/o source again. It's why we no longer
use XMod, and some others. We calculated we lost around 500
dollars because the source wasn't purchased (not available...we
*always* purchased the source module), and the nightmare of redoing web
sites because someone who had a module available for 2.x is now
gone...it's not worth the trouble. At least w/source available we
can hire someone, or get one of us to learn to make the changes
necessary. Also, for one site (mine, the ewriters.org) one, I
need to make some changes to some of the purchased modeuls (add a
column in the tables for each module used on one page), so I can add a
specific capability. When people ask, 'what could users possibly
want w/the source code' well, it's not understanding the marketplace,
IMO. Most of us, while perhaps not ASP.NET gurus, have *some*
programming background, or need to make a change or two to a module to
suit our *specific* needs.
The needs of the marketplace *will* and always do prevail. I
believe sooner or later, the folks who are paranoid about people
stealing code and reselling it (has anyone have ANY proof this has
happened even once?), well, someone else will end up offering a similar
module *with* source, and they'll have taken a potentially lucrative
and sole market, and created competition for themselves. We
haven't used the email products we've paid over 400 dollars for,
because the source isn't available. We plan on sticking to our
guns on this, because the *loss* of money is minimal when compared to
the LOSS of functionality when a module is not upgraded, and we have no
recourse, becasuse we have no source.
Heck, I just finished beta testing two products for purveyors, only to
find out they're not supplying source. I simply said thanks but
no thanks, but wish I'd have *known* their intentions when I spent the
time beta-testing the modules. I'd have spent my time better.
BTW, I click on the survey link above and get a 'document contains no
data' error. I think Scott has an excellent idea. He
charges a certain amount a year, and supplies whatever modules he
thinks are useful. I bet his business model will attract a lot of
customers because his prices are reasonable, *and* he provides
source. Hey, this is just one opinion. I understand that
every purveyor has the right to do whatever they want w/their
work. It *is* their work after all. On the other side, us
purchasers can *also* speak w/our wallets. I suggest we do this,
based on my experience, and it's not even the loss of wasted money
(though over 500 bucks is not chicken feed to most of us)...it's the
loss of functionality and time spent having to do workarounds when new
versions of DNN are supplied. Currently, there are absolutely NO
standards demanded by the websites that *sell* the modules
either. When we purchase modules, we can't even tell where the
heck they are in the list!