July 13, 2024 โ I am writing a book in a private git repo that you can buy lifetime access to for $50.
That repo is where the source code for the book lives before it gets published to the public domain.
The public gets a new carefully crafted book with source code, just delayed. If you pay, you get early access.
This business model I'm calling "Early Source".
Early Source is a new business model for public domain, open source software. You publish your software to the public domain, but with a delay of N years. Professionals that most benefit from faster updates pay you for access to the private, cutting edge version.
Early Source is a win-win-win-win:
What are the downsides? Let me hear it in the comments.
So far, I would have to say early source is a pain in the ass.
Keeping 2 repos going, one private and one public, is just a lot of cognitive overhead. Far more than I thought.
Instead of trying to connect revenue to digital access, I think I'll publish the ebook free, and sell a paper version, as well as additional stuff around this, like a course with real human interaction.