On Thursday 9. February 2017 16.18.10 Erik Albers wrote:
Hi FSFE community,
those of you who do develop Free Software privately or that are still thinking about realising a project, could be interested in the Prototype Fund: https://prototypefund.de/en/
An interesting initiative, although they might want to have a simpler Web site that doesn't make my X server use 90% of the CPU continuously. Fortunately, w3m manages to show the content fairly clearly, and I guess it's the logo that is doing something fancy with my normal browser.
it is a project by the Open Knowledge Foundation and the German Ministry of Education and Research where developers can apply for up to 30.000 Euros in half a year so they can concentrate on coding. The only restriction it has is to have a living place in Germany (although you can move here for this half of a year if I understood correctly). Else, it comes with less formalia as possible.
What seems different about this is that the sums of money involved are actually reasonable for people to live on, not bounty-level amounts or the equivalent of a tip jar, that it isn't another fund that gets consumed by the usual consortia of academia and industry (indeed, it "specifically aims at freelance open source developers"), and although the "prototype" emphasis initially sounds like a mechanism to develop half-finished works that didn't exist before and barely exist afterwards, they do seem to welcome existing projects as long as the subject of the application is a discrete piece of new functionality.
I'd like to hope that other countries might try something similar. Sadly, the current Norwegian government actually reduced (maybe even eliminated completely) its encouragement of Free Software adoption, letting the proprietary software lobby have its own way as usual, so I don't expect very much right here, at least [*].
Paul
[*] Apart from the near-ubiquitous, self-congratulatory start-up hype, which the cynic might argue is just another way to get office space occupied by paying tenants.