A friend I went to college with started a Kickstarter to fund a project of his - I was completely skeptical of the fact that he wanted strangers on the Internet to give him $100,000. Turns out it wasn't such a bad idea - he's only $6,000 away from his goal, in less than a week.
This thread is 50% a plug for him, as I think he deserves some recognition for putting in the hours and effort to build something like this from the ground up. The other 50% is the shock at seeing someone raise money like that, it's insane. I've seen Kickstarters that make a lot of money before, but it's different seeing it happen to someone you know. For me, it's very inspirational. Hopefully this takes off, and he never has to work another day for someone else in his life.
Here's a link to my friend's Kickstarter project if anyone is interested in checking it out: bladeRF - USB 3.0 Software Defined Radio by Nuand — Kickstarter
From a marketing perspective it's pretty cool too. I think that getting on the front page of Slashdot was good for around 50k in contributions, and being tweeted by Tim O'Reilly (which I believe was picked up from Slashdot) saw another 20k or so come in.
Do any of you have experience working with Kickstarter or crowd sourcing types of applications? If so, did anything good come of it?
I also have some mixed opinions on this type of approach in general. I'm wondering if it's just a fad, or if this is something that is going to stick around for a while. One of the biggest concerns I feel people have with Kickstarter for instance is accountability. I'd be interested in seeing what percentage of companies actually follow through with their goals or intentions, what percentage fails, and how many people (if any) just take the money and run with it.
This thread is 50% a plug for him, as I think he deserves some recognition for putting in the hours and effort to build something like this from the ground up. The other 50% is the shock at seeing someone raise money like that, it's insane. I've seen Kickstarters that make a lot of money before, but it's different seeing it happen to someone you know. For me, it's very inspirational. Hopefully this takes off, and he never has to work another day for someone else in his life.
Here's a link to my friend's Kickstarter project if anyone is interested in checking it out: bladeRF - USB 3.0 Software Defined Radio by Nuand — Kickstarter
From a marketing perspective it's pretty cool too. I think that getting on the front page of Slashdot was good for around 50k in contributions, and being tweeted by Tim O'Reilly (which I believe was picked up from Slashdot) saw another 20k or so come in.
Do any of you have experience working with Kickstarter or crowd sourcing types of applications? If so, did anything good come of it?
I also have some mixed opinions on this type of approach in general. I'm wondering if it's just a fad, or if this is something that is going to stick around for a while. One of the biggest concerns I feel people have with Kickstarter for instance is accountability. I'd be interested in seeing what percentage of companies actually follow through with their goals or intentions, what percentage fails, and how many people (if any) just take the money and run with it.