Just a thought, but you could use something like gitcred to give it away
for free if people meet a certain threshold for involvement in the
clojure ecosystem. This also might incentivize clojure development and
allow you to offer it free to authors whose libraries are in your graph.

https://github.com/mmcgrana/gitcred

Chas Emerick <cemer...@snowtide.com> writes:

> Today, I’m opening up a “preview” site for Clojure Atlas [1], a new side 
> project of mine that I’m particularly excited about.
>
> Clojure Atlas is an experiment in visualizing a programming language and its 
> standard library.  I’ve long been frustrated with the limitations of text in
> programming, and this is my attempt to do something about it.  From the site:
>
>     While Clojure Atlas has a number of raisons d’être, it fundamentally 
> exists because I’ve consistently thought that typical programming language 
> and API
>     references – being, in general, walls of text and alphabetized links – 
> are really poor at conveying the most important information: not the minutiae 
> of
>     function signatures and class hierarchies, but the stuff that’s “between 
> the lines”, the context and interrelationships between such things that too
>     often are only discovered and internalized by bumping into them in the 
> course of programming. This is especially true if we’re learning a language 
> and
>     its libraries (really, a never-ending process given the march of 
> progress), and what’s standing in our way is not, for example, being able to 
> easily
>     access the documentation or signature for a particular known function, 
> but discovering the mere existence of a previously-unknown function that is
>     perfect for our needs at a given moment.
>    
> This is just a preview – all sizzle and no steak, as it were.  I’m working 
> away at the ontology that drives the visualization and user experience, but I 
> want
> to get some more early (quiet) feedback from a few folks to make sure I’m not 
> committing egregious sins in various ways before throwing open the doors to 
> the
> world.
>
> In the meantime, if you’re really interested, follow @ClojureAtlas [2], 
> and/or sign up for email updates [3] on the site. 
>
> - Chas
>
> [1] http://clojureatlas.com
> [2] http://twitter.com/ClojureAtlas
> [3] http://clojureatlas.com/subscribe
>
> P.S. This is a ML repost of my announcement @ 
> http://cemerick.com/2011/04/19/clojure-atlas-preview/
>
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- Fred Concklin

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