Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

SoylentNews is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop. Only 14 submissions in the queue.
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.]


Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (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.