All,
couple of quick points:
Sebastian commented
"There had been a decision by the DNN Corp. to decrease visibility of existing extensions - AFAIK in order to increase options for other open source extensions to become bundled with DotNetNuke framework in the future. Bundling might be substituted in the future by an integrated download option, like for Firefox Add-ons"
Just in case this is misinterpreted, we are not trying to encourage sales of modules by making existing core projects less visibile - they're bundled as always, and can be installed via the available extensions dialog in host->extensions. Instead the intent is to make core projects true "codeplex" modules and develop plans to help with that. This means that conceivably any dotnetnuke codeplex project could become part of the bundled install, allowing for "best of breed" modules to win out, and not artificially limiting the list to only "traditional" codeplex modules e.g. if a better contact module was available in time it could become a core module, and utilise any services we offer e.g. the project release tracker and it's testing stages i.e. installation, xhtml and security testing.
Secondly, there was mention of a desire for a review program. The DotNetNuke marketplace offered this for a time, and it had only limited success. Only some module developers were happy to pay for reviews, and realistically the effort that was needed made this an expensive, loss-making exercise. I don't know of any plans to reintroduce it. Related to this, I know the snowcovered team have plans to enhance the website this year, so hopefully it will become a better place to gather information/ratings before considering a purchase.
FYI Shaun briefly mentioned better integration of dotnetnuke and snowcovered in a recent interview : http://howsoftwareisbuilt.com/2010/02...
Cathal