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posted by martyb on Tuesday September 13 2016, @12:29PM   Printer-friendly
from the bucks-for-bytes dept.

I'm nearing feature completion of a command-line tool that I hope will enable me to pay my rent myself. There are many services that provide online stores; which would be the best for me?

I expect to provide installers for .deb and .rpm Linuxes (Linuces?), *BSD, Mac OS X and Windows. The user will select the platform, pay then download the installer.

I expect I'll provide a time-limited demo.

It won't have DRM as I'm convinced someone would just crack it. And really DRM sounds like a PITA from my perspective. The product will be inexpensive; I have the hope that most people would rather pay than have to figure out how to download a "liberated" product.

The eCommerce services I've checked out so far enable the sale of physical products as well as Software as a Service.

I am less concerned with the cost of my store provided I can still make a profit.

I'm not going to sell it through Apple's App Store because I don't want to deal with the sandbox. I expect most of my users will be comfortable with command-lines; I don't forsee them wanting to shop at the App Store.

I hope to go Alpha in a week.

[In consideration of other Soylentils who may have a product with a GUI, or even this submitter should they decide to add one, what other store(s) would you recommend? -Ed.]


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 13 2016, @07:37PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 13 2016, @07:37PM (#401453)

    It provides shopping cart functionality to the command line, enabling the selling of physical goods and services only.

    Sounds... erm..?

    Many years ago I wrote my own cli invoicing app, ended up typing the invoices and doing manual double entry. That worked better for ~20 sales invoices and 5-6 purchases invoices a month. Then I wrote a cli stock control system for electronic components and ended up not bothering - the admin overhead of updating it whenever I grabbed a couple of caps or resistors wasn't worth the hassle. It was more cost and time effective for me to massively over order stock than to track it using a database.

    I have learned to be realistic about the real-world utility of such tools. The one tool I do still use is a web app that I use to upload scanned images of purchase receipts, although it's cumbersome (could do with a rewrite TBH) the value is simply that it saves me storing paper till receipts.