This short presentation explains what Gna! provides, how it is setup and why it makes sense for a new member to join
What does Gna! provide?
- It is a software forge hosting service based on both GitLab and Gitea.
- Individuals and organizations can create an account for free within limits.
- If they need more storage or continuous integration, they can get additional resources by paying for them with their credit card.
- As Gna! reputation grows it also becomes a showcase to sell services such as on premise hosting, integration within the information system of a large organization, training etc.
- This is where the real money is. And the profits it makes are used to keep the public hosting service going.
- This is a healthy relationship between services and hosting.
How is it setup?
- From the outside it looks like GitLab or GitHub but with a big difference
- Gna! does not and will not rely on proprietary software or user lock in
- Instead it is setup as a collective of organizations and individuals
- What they have in common is a successfully track record providing services based on GitLab or Gitea
- They work together to run the Gna! which is a showcase that helps them sell services by raising their public profile
- None of them can do that individually: it is too costly. But collectively they can.
What is the incentive to become a member of Gna!?
- In a nutshell because the work done to further Gna! is paid for, short term
- Not because Gna!'s reputation creates a demand for service, this will take a few years
- In the meantime members of the collective can apply for governmental incentives and grants
- Gna! works with its members to make that happen, with expertise and content
- That is actually what Easter-eggs, my employer, does: that’s what allowed me to work on Gna! during the past four months
- Eventually this will no longer be necessary, when Gna!'s brand is well known and it makes it easier to sell services
- Members of the collective will then share their profits with Gna! to keep it running instead of relying on grants
Long term vision
- When Gna! reaches maturity, it is designed to stop growing and stay small, not scale up
- It is expected instead that other collectives will be created using the same model
- Together these organizations can scale horizontally and will make centralized software forges obsolete