Hefty new fees?
Shari
gypsyware at earthlink.net
Fri Aug 22 10:35:01 EDT 2003
[NOTE: I know these discussions have pretty well ended. I wrote
this back when we were all discussing the big changes. But before
sending it, I wrote to Kevin. I did not want to open a big
discussion, without first verifying what I read on his website. That
I understood it correctly. I was hoping that he would offer some
good news, and that I had misunderstood. I've yet to hear from him.
As his reply pretty much dictates whether I will have to abandoned
Metacard, and I don't WANT to abandon Metacard, I am posting this
belatedly, in the hopes of... a miracle?]
>I'd encourage Kevin to run with this product the best he can and in
>Kevin style. I think my best chance of getting the feature set I
>want is in that.
>
>Dar Scott
This is a good point. Perhaps if Scott had been as successful as he
wanted, with fewer tech support issues, we'd still have MC as we know
it.
I do not know Kevin. I don't know what sort of fellow he is, though
I've heard many say good things of him. And some very big names in
the xTalk community fully support him.
For those of us who are using MC, it comes down to something very
simple: What's it going to cost?
According to the licensing info on the RunRev website, to purchase a
license that allows you to develop on multiple platforms would cost
$1200, with renewals of $400 per year. But what happens if you do
not renew every year? Is it $1200 again? That's how it appears.
I emailed Kevin on August 8 regarding this, but have as yet to
receive a reply. There is a big difference between paying $400 and
$1200 when you want to upgrade. And what of those of us who are
licensed in Metacard, and do not make the switch now, but wait until
later? Would we pay $400 or $1200?
--- Begin Shari's Rant ---
I have Metacard installed on three platforms, ONLY because I've
discovered that the anomalies from platform to platform, are nearly
impossible to deal with unless you can fix them on the offending
platform directly.
I develop on ONE machine. And use the other two to test, and iron
out bugs. I tried doing all the work on one machine, but it simply
does not work well, for cross platform anomalies. You need to be
able to TEST while you are fixing.
Spending $400 for an upgrade license * when you need one* is
acceptable. When desired features have been added, or a platform
change mandates it. Spending $1200 for an upgrade, is not
acceptable. And if I am reading their site correctly, even if I am a
licensed user, it would cost me $1200 to upgrade if I do not upgrade
promptly every year.
Still hoping for that little ray of hope, that the news from Kevin
will be good news.
I don't make three times the income, for putting out cross platform
software. For every FOUR days I spend programming, I make the
equivalent of ONE day's pay. So the bottom line is, I work full
time, but have a part-time income, and do fully support myself. Very
few of us start out with a full time income from software sales. My
sales have increased dramatically, so the future is very promising,
but it is still the future. And I am sure there are others in the
same situation.
I don't wish to be limited to one platform. This would be corporate
suicide. The ability to compile for all the major platforms was a
major selling point when I purchased Metacard, but the reality is,
unless you have it installed on each platform, you are going to have
one hell of a headache when the bug reports come in.
I do hope that Kevin, while he is thinking all this out, doesn't fall
into the misconception of thinking that anyone who wishes to develop
for all three platforms, is making mucho bucks doing it, and can
easily afford to pay for a hefty tri-platform fee. I'd have to
seriously consider doing what I've tried desperately to avoid...
migrating to a "standard" language, such as C/C++. Paying $1200 to
upgrade simply is not feasible.
Gosh, it took a year and a half for me to finally purchase Metacard.
I weighed the pros and cons for that long, before taking the leap.
Metacard... or C... Metacard... or C... I stayed with a dying
compiler for a long time before making the leap (Hypercard). And it
has taken another year and a half for Metacard to even remotely start
to earn its keep.
And now, I have to weigh this decision again? Not a happy place to
be. I do not want to go down with another dying compiler. If I do
not at some point upgrade, Metacard as I have it will break when some
OS change breaks it. So it isn't like you can say, I'll just stay
where I am and everything will be okay. For today, it will be okay.
But tomorrow?
I am 30+% of the way thru a big program. It started in Hypercard,
and I had to redo the whole thing in Metacard. I'd hate to start all
over again in C.
* sigh *
Still hoping for that little ray of hope, that the news from Kevin
will be good news.
Wishing so hard....... wishing so hard....... please do not abandoned
those of us, who work our heinies off, but haven't reached that level
of success to be considered one of the Big Boys yet.........
And I know that I am not alone......
May Kevin in his infinite wisdom, find a place for those like me.
Shari
--
--Shareware Games for the Mac--
http://www.gypsyware.com
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