Hi Shai,
I've been a commercial DNN module developer since the beginning, first selling my modules back in 2004. I have lived through every trial and tumult in this community (does anyone remember Flatburger?). I've survived many ups and downs in the economy and marketplace. I cannot count the number of times that "the community" sounded the death knell for DNN. Granted, DNN Corp has made a few bad decisions in the past. Every company and person is fallible.
I've also had moments where I was not happy with DNN Corp's decisions and have felt the energy ebb from the community. The recent re-branding, however, is one decision I can get fully behind.
First, removing "DotNetNuke" from the moniker is a huge leap forward in terms of making our platform sound like a grown-up platform. I have likened it to a child that has turned 18, left his/her parents house, and decided to be called John instead of Johnny.
Second, re-branding the commercial products to be called "Evoq" makes a lot of sense too. This enables the commercial side of the product to be distinguished and marketed more easily going forward. Try walking into the offices of a Fortune 500 company and pitching "DotNetNuke". It's an unnecessary hurdle you have to jump.
In the end, the revenue of DNN Corp funds development and infrastructure of the community. Companies do this all the time. Adobe recently forked the open source project "Code Mirror" and called it Brackets - another open source project. Then they pulled that into their own commercial product Adobe Code. Evoq Content and Evoq Social is no different.
Third, if DNN Corp were to drop support for the community edition, it would be like cutting off their legs and trying to run a marathon. It's just not going to happen. Without the open source version, they're just another company trying to market their proprietary wares - a very difficult prospect in this saturated market.
There is merit to your idea of a separate website. After all 10Gen, the company behind the open source MongoDB, has 2 sites for MongoDB - mongodb.com and mongodb.org. The .org goes to the community MongoDB site. In theory this sounds like a good idea. However, given the reaction to the rebranding, can you imagine the hell-fire that would rain down if DNN actually shunted the community off onto its own website? What kind of signal would you have taken from that?
Personally knowing some of the leading personalities at DNN Corp like Erik, Bruce, Will Morgenweck, Joe Brinkman and many others, I know they are deeply committed to the success of the platform - both the commercial side and the community side.
Anyway, change always makes people edgy - understandably so. But it's change that allows people and products to thrive. Otherwise they grow sedentary, slow, and dull-witted and will eventually eaten by a faster, smarter predator/competitor.
My 2cents,
Kelly
Kelly Ford
Founder and Developer of XMod Pro and DNNDev.com