-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 12
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
UberHacker #21
Comments
codeable.io does this specifically for Wordpress hackers. |
I find this exact problem to be really interesting. The closet thing I have seen towards this is HackHands which had a very nifty Jabber bot that would ping you when a new task matching your skillset went live. The jobs posted are usually a bit more significant than BountySource I've also been thinking along these lines quite a bit not just in terms of libraries and code specific infrastructure, but in terms of end-user facing open source software (operating systems, window managers, and apps) as all of these things have a design / UX component that is traditionally lacking in FOSS tools! |
Dude! I reckon that IPFS is fully kosher! You should totally go ahead with all your wildest ambitions and just let the chips fall where they might. |
web3 $HUNT is probably looking to go somehow in this direction |
At some point the tipping point will be passed and talented open source hackers will be able to solve costly problems for orgs without having to take employment there. Something is going to reduce the massive friction between orgs that want to have working code, and freelance/open source hackers who don't want to go work at those companies full time.
Consider this story:
Perhaps what till make this all work is a platform that works hard to evaluate and promote developers + route inbound requests to them, of specific problems. Think of it like Uber, instead of being distributed over the world's surface, the UberCoders are distributed across knowledge + problem domains. (is Athena a prereq? prob not. prob can just parse github). The router org would find the right person that wants to work on that, that can either solve the problem, or solve it conceptually and provide recommendations/program sketches. The org would facilitate negotiation of both ends and source the markets. And serve as the legal contracting company, so it can be super easy (like paying for uber) across the world. It's important that the devs (and clients) can specify all sorts of constraints (like, will ONLY develop MIT/BSD2 code, or in particular languages, with particular tools, etc. Nobody worth their salt wants to work with crap, or with draconian licenses).
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: