If you don't mind me asking, what are some features you think are most desirable for you to develop, and what would be your time budget for developing them, if it is more than 6 months?
And which title from levels.fyi do you think is most applicable to the person or people who would be working on that feature?
Happy to — it’s a great question! I want all software to be open source but we really haven’t figured out how to fund many types of open source projects yet.
- Database appliances (RDS) for major DBs
- turnkey security, especially for compliance (SOC2, HIPAA, ISO 27001)
- close the loop on development environments (vscode)
- CICD
That’s pretty close to our series A roadmap. Mythical man months aside, I’d say all of that could be production-ready in around 18 months with a few engineers per bullet point.
In terms of salaries it’s a little tricky for a number of reasons (people are willing to work for less for a startup and/or on open source plus we hired around the world), but for many of the developers I’d say equivalent to L4-5.
The important thing to remember about PaaS is multi-node vs single node are different worlds. There are great tools like dokku that were designed only for single node operation, then there are things like Flynn or k8 for many nodes. As soon as you’re doing many nodes you’re in distributed systems territory where engineers have to manage much more complete systems design and as a result are more expensive and in more demand. That’s not saying anything bad about simpler tools, they’re great and important, it’s just a lot harder to design around distributed systems where failure modes, consensus, partitions, etc are a lot more complicated. A lot of the challenges when we started were figuring out what the problems were and how to solve them rather than implementation time. In the last 5 years there has been a lot more written so less research would be needed to implement some of these today.
Our overall goal was to automate anything in the devops lifecycle that could be automated, so that’s a never ending process. Unfortunately it means that the more you scale the more technology you have to make, so Flynn for smaller companies with fewer users is less expensive to design and build than Flynn for huge companies with lots of traffic. (Again, distributed systems are hard) so knowing the scale of your prospective users is a big part of the cost equation.
For me as a totally uninitiated, the database appliances sounds like the lowest hanging fruit with the fewest unknown unknowns and the biggest payoff, is that correct?
At what you described, for 6 months, that's about 200K USD per dev, so it would cost about 600K USD to develop the database appliances "superfeature"?
Do you think this is a realistic figure? And how realistic do you think it is to get that much money together from all the users?
$180k base salary is appropriate but most of those people are expecting stock options as well (compare to Levels) so the fully loaded price* is closer to 300-500k/year x 3 people, so $1-1.5mm
We’ve already done most of the conceptual and architectural work for Postgres, MySQL, and mongo (and redis but not highly available). Much of that was inspired by the Manatee project at Joyent. So (though I haven’t looked at this I a while and the DBs may have changed in a way that becomes more challenging) this is probably a case of put money in, get value out.
However I can assure you you aren’t going to get even 600k out of the community.
We worked really hard to get the first 120k and twisted a lot of wrists to get there. (Of course if you know someone who wants to write 600k checks for open source stuff please have them call me)
The 1-1.5mm number is about what a standard YC company gets at demo day. So that’s the path I’d recommend. Add in another 500k for overhead and biz dev people and that’s a pretty solid startup. Honestly if we had just focused on that we would probably have got a series A.
One of the great things about open source is that you create 100x+ the amount of value that you capture. The dark side is that no one wants to contribute cash as users to make that happen (I’m thinking more of companies than individuals - lots of individuals will give a few dollars)
So, unfortunately, and as always, it’s easier to raise VC than sponsorships for open source.
That being said I strongly encourage anyone who’s interested to pick up where we left off. Either as a community project or a funded startup this would be a huge benefit to the ecosystem.
* of course you can find people who are cheaper and passionate about the project to do it for less, maybe much less. But if someone called me and said for what price can you guarantee this could be done, I’d say 1-1.5mm USD.
Cool. We got the first 120k from I think around 12 companies. It followed close to a power law distribution, very long tail.
Our strategy was to encourage developers to talk to their bosses rather than contribute individually which we think but can’t prove worked well. Basically we tried to get on calls with CTOs and CEOs and explain that this would help the company.
Is there anything you would've done differently during that campaign?
Did the money come from the companies' tech budgets?
Was it a one lump sum pre-payment or periodic payments? Were there any strings like deliverables attached?
Hope this is not too much to ask, I'm really interested in the process.
I am developing something almost completely the opposite -- a website platform designed only for small-scale deployments by individuals and small communities, with purposeful mechanisms to limit/control growth, and for now deliberately without any finances, fregan.
Recently I have been coming to terms with the idea that I may get a lot further if I attract outside help, but currently I don't have much to pay with, and I've not made it easy for someone to just jump in and start contributing.
Honestly there aren’t a lot of products that were funded this way so I can’t point you to specific resources.
In our case the funding came prepaid with no strings attached. Can’t speak to where in their budgets the funds were allocated from.
I think we should build an ecosystem where companies support open source projects that benefit their companies with great ROI. Unfortunately I don’t know how we get there yet.
There are so many different funding models now for different things (https://humanipo.app/ for example) that there must be a good answer. We should all work together and try harder to find what the best option is.
You've gifted a lot of insight.
If you don't mind me asking, what are some features you think are most desirable for you to develop, and what would be your time budget for developing them, if it is more than 6 months?
And which title from levels.fyi do you think is most applicable to the person or people who would be working on that feature?