On 5/28/03, Rick Davis wrote:

[ ... ]

>>The marketing decisions of software developers often puzzle me.
>
>There is nothing puzzling about this at all. If you want to build a nice house, you 
>start by building a firm foundation. That's what we are doing now -- helping firm up 
>the foundation. There's no sense adding more features while there are still bugs. 
>Once we all help get this debugged and version 1.0 is out the door, the other stuff 
>can be added.

Also, feature implementation is often based on a sort of cost-benefit
analysis. If a feature is easy to add, it goes in even if it's not
helpful to most people. Hard features may not go in even if they
are popular (e.g. Nisus never really produced a working Quark filter
because, while highly beneficial, it was a lot of work).

Chances are, at this point, the Nisus people are still learning
what they can and can't do in Cocoa with NEx. So we're getting
mostly "easy" (low-benefit) features.

-- 
Bob Waltz
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

"The one thing we learn from history --
   is that no one ever learns from history."

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