Lynn Fredricks wrote:

For those who know what Im talking about - remember.. mTropolis? ;-)

What I remember about mTropolis was that at the trade shows they acted like debutantes fresh out of finishing school: at $5,000 a license, they gave a quick look at your watch and your shoes before deciding whether you were worth talking to. ;)

That unique customer service approach came back to haunt them later: by the time they dropped the price by about 75% the following year, they'd already turned off so many people to their company that I knew very few who bothered looking at it.

For those unfamiliar with mTropolis, the saga of their demise is described in this Salon article:
<http://archive.salon.com/21st/feature/1998/06/10feature.html>

They also discovered a common failing of many visual authoring systems, as noted in <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MTropolis>:

   One criticism of the tool was that the integrated programming
   language, Miniscript, was lacking key features necessary for
   common tasks. Because mTropolis was conceived around a visual
   programming metaphor, mFactory engineers intentionally omitted
   control constructs such as conditional loops.

Bill Appleton ran into the same thing after he made CourseBuilder, which was part of his motivation for creating SuperCard. As he put it in an interview I did with him back in '89, "Visual systems are great for simple things, but once you get to a certain level of complexity they just break down, they're just not as expressive as scripting."

--
 Richard Gaskin
 Fourth World
 Rev training and consulting: http://www.fourthworld.com
 Webzine for Rev developers: http://www.revjournal.com
 revJournal blog: http://revjournal.com/blog.irv
_______________________________________________
use-revolution mailing list
use-revolution@lists.runrev.com
Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription 
preferences:
http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution

Reply via email to