I guess the question is if they felt like they could continue with their current staffing. Obviously this is a really big funding round, so they clearly decided to aim for more than the status quo, but I've seen plenty of projects where it was many dev's side project, or it was a small number of full-time dev's work, but they were getting burned out and overworked trying to provide the service.
It just always feels too easy to assume that it was sustainable to run/maintain some minimally priced service. Perhaps they realized they needed more developers to have a healthy relationship with their job, and instead of raising the price to $30/year or more to match the new costs, they decided to shoot for the moon.
I'm certainly not trying to say that it's obvious that they're making the right call by taking this investment, or that this won't all fall apart. It's just also important to not assume that the status quo for them was something they could keep going on for the next 3 years.
It just always feels too easy to assume that it was sustainable to run/maintain some minimally priced service. Perhaps they realized they needed more developers to have a healthy relationship with their job, and instead of raising the price to $30/year or more to match the new costs, they decided to shoot for the moon.
I'm certainly not trying to say that it's obvious that they're making the right call by taking this investment, or that this won't all fall apart. It's just also important to not assume that the status quo for them was something they could keep going on for the next 3 years.