Fee breakdown for various donation platforms January 16, 2018 on Drew DeVault's blog

Understanding fees are a really confusing part of supporting creators of things you like. I provide a few ways for people to support my work, and my supporters can struggle to understand the differences between them. It comes down to fees, of which there are several kinds (note: I just made these terms up):

All of this adds up to a very confusing picture. I’ve made a calculator to help you sort it out.

Note: For an up-to-date calculation of Patreon’s fees, see the follow-up post.

Sources

fosspay

Only the typical Stripe fee is applied.

Note: I am the author of fosspay, if you didn’t already know.

Patreon

How do you calculate fees?

What are my options to receive payout?

Liberapay

FAQ

Have a comment on one of my posts? Start a discussion in my public inbox by sending an email to ~sircmpwn/public-inbox@lists.sr.ht [mailing list etiquette]

Articles from blogs I read Generated by openring

Status update, August 2020

Hi! Regardless of the intense heat I’ve been exposed to this last month, I’ve still been able to get some stuff done (although having to move out to another room which isn’t right under the roof). I’ve worked a lot on IRC-related projects. I’ve added a znc-i…

via emersion 2020-08-19 00:00:00 +0200 +0200

What's cooking on Sourcehut? August 2020

Another month passes and we find ourselves writing (or reading) this status update on a quiet, rainy Sunday morning. Today our userbase numbers 16,683 members strong, up 580 from last month. Please extend a kind welcome to our new colleagues! Thanks for read…

via Blogs on Sourcehut 2020-08-16 00:00:00 +0000 +0000

Go 1.15 is released

Today the Go team is very happy to announce the release of Go 1.15. You can get it from the download page. Some of the highlights include: Substantial improvements to the Go linker Improved allocation for small objects at high core coun…

via The Go Programming Language Blog 2020-08-11 11:00:00 +0000 +0000

North Pacific Logbook

The passage from Japan (Shimoda) to Canada (Victoria) took 51 days, and it was the hardest thing we've ever done. We decided to keep a logbook, to better remember it and so it can help others who wish to make this trip.Continue Reading

via Hundred Rabbits 2020-07-31 00:00:00 +0000 GMT