how do you feel about Nginx Plus?
I think we are definitely getting off-topic (vis-a-vis the thread), but here goes:
In
one sentence:
nginX is doing the opposite of what LiteSpeed is doing.
Short answer
nginx Plus is built on top of nginx, which lots of people (somewhere around 20% of the web, in fact) are already using.
You are trying to build OLS as LiteSpeed Minus in the hope of attracting more folks.
Longer answer
nginX created a fantastic Open Source server, which came to be used by millions of sites worldwide. Now, to capitalize on the popularity (when Wired does an article on you, you are mainstream) they are building on top of this tried and tested platform. These additional services are commercial and of the millions of current users, even if a small proportion trade-up, nginX still stands to make decent amounts of money.
LiteSpeed created a scrappy, performance server as a commercial product. Now that OpenSource servers are eating into the niche, LiteSpeed are trying to put artificial barriers in place to block some functionality and release a watered-down version under OpenSource license.
Who would use this?
nginX's Freemium model is tried and tested. Of the millions of folks already using nginX, if there are some folks missing a few features, they'd be delighted to get something additional for a small fee. nginX doesn't even have to market the "Plus" product.
LiteSpeed is used by a few corporates. They are already paying. A fraction of them might convert to OLS (which is actually a bad thing from revenues perspective...but on the other hand if you don't cannibalize your product, nginX, Lighty and yes Apache will...what would you do then?). But that is unlikely to make OLS popular. Do you see the problem here? You might think that nginX and LiteSpeed are approaching the same end-result from different ends, but the fact is that you have "no" captive audience. In order to make "new" people want to use OLS, you need to make a splash. You need to provide a drop-in Apache replacement that is leaner, meaner, faster, easier. Anything short of that is likely to fizzle out.
Hence my
suggestions on the other thread.