Donationware is a licensing model that supplies fully operational unrestricted software to the user and requests an optional donation be paid to the programmer or a third-party beneficiary (usually a non-profit).[1] The amount of the donation may also be stipulated by the author, or it may be left to the discretion of the user, based on individual perceptions of the software's value. Since donationware comes fully operational (i.e. not crippleware/Freemium) when payment is optional, it is a type of freeware.
Contents
1History
2See also
3References
4External links
History
An example of donationware is the 1987 Atari ST video game Ballerburg, whose programmer distributed the game for free but asked for a donation, offering as incentive the source code for the game.[2]Red Ryder was a terminal emulation software program created for the Apple Macintosh in the 1980s that used donations to fund development.[citation needed].
See also
Careware, where the software developer requests a donation to charity
^April 1987: Ballerburg - Zwei Spieler, zwei Burgen und ein Berg dazwischen... on eckhardkruse.net "Ich habe das Programm als Public Domain veröffentlicht (die Unterscheidung in Freeware, Shareware usw. gab es damals nicht), mit der Bitte um eine 20 DM Spende. Dafür gab es dann die erweitere Version und den Quellcode." (in German)
External links
Jesse Reichler (2006) Donationware experience – An article describing experiments with donationware at Donationcoder.
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Software distribution
Licenses
Beerware
Floating licensing
Free and open-source
Free
Open source
Freely redistributable
Proprietary
Public domain
Source-available
Compensation models
Adware
Commercial software
Retail software
Crippleware
Crowdfunding
Freemium
Freeware
Pay what you want
Careware
Donationware
Open-core model
Postcardware
Shareware
Nagware
Delivery methods
Digital distribution
File sharing
On-premises
Pre-installed
Product bundling
Retail software
Sneakernet
Software as a service
Deceptive and/or illicit
Unwanted software bundling
Malware
Spyware
Trojan horse
Worm
Ransomware
Scareware
Shovelware
Vaporware
Software release life cycle
Abandonware
End-of-life
Long-term support
Software maintenance
Software maintainer
Software publisher
Copy protection
Digital rights management
Software protection dongle
Hardware restrictions
License manager
Product activation
Product key
Software copyright
Software patent
Torrent poisoning
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This article is about the letter of the alphabet. For other uses, see Y (disambiguation). See also: Wye (disambiguation) Y Y y (See below) Usage Writing system Latin script Type Alphabetic and Logographic Language of origin Latin language Phonetic usage [ y ] [ ɨ ] [ j ] [ iː ] [ ɪ ] [ ɘ ] [ ə ] [ ɯ ] [ ɛː ] [ j ] [ ɥ ] [ ɣ̟ ] / w aɪ / / aɪ / Unicode value U+0059, U+0079 Alphabetical position 25 History Development Υ υ 𐌖 Y y Time period 54 to present Descendants • U • V • W • Ỿ • ¥ • Ꮙ • Ꮍ • Ꭹ Sisters F Ѵ У Ў Ұ Ү ו و ܘ וּ וֹ ࠅ 𐎆 𐡅 ወ વ ૂ ુ उ Variations (See below) Other Other letters commonly used with y(x), ly, ny This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA. ISO basic Latin alphabet Aa Bb Cc D...
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