I raised the question because my download of NWP 141 is dated May
2009. In a couple of months, that will be two years -- and not even a
point upgrade since. In the software world, that is next to dead.
I'm not dissatisfied with NWP -- I use it daily and I like it. I'm
not a mad upgrader either -- heavens, my email client is Eudora
6.2.4, my graphics/dtp program -- which contributes significantly to
my livelihood -- is Canvas X which ACD stopped developing about 5
years ago and stopped selling and supporting two or three years ago,
and my contact/calendar program is Chronos's Personal Organizer 4.5
(because their SOHO Organizer is rubbish -- but I'm about to switch
to Contactizer, I think., after years of waiting for SOHO to come
good!).
The reason I raised the question is because there are things about
NWP 1.4.1 which are simply unfinished and should have been fixed ages
ago.
Apart from the vertical rulers, which Nisus *invented* for WPs, there
are the tables which really need some improvement and have needed it
since they came out. I've done some good stuff with them, but they
suffer (at the simplest level) from the user being unable to nail
them to the page and unable to set styles for cells. There is the
outlining capability -- almost there but not quite; it needs tweaks
to make NWP a brilliant report writer. The import and placement of
graphics and pix is very basic, and there is the inability to caption
illustrations. At a very basic level, there are the wandering page
margins which people have talked about since Express, but which have
never been nailed down, and the odd measurements for the placement of
margins, tabs., etc.
These things re not way out or specialist, I would have thought, in
fact my view of them is just the opposite. I would have thought they
were right at the core of demand in NWP's chosen market(s).
When I was exploring NWP v.1.4.1 and being accepting (if not entirely
happy about) moderate progress, I was thinking that these things --
not such great things, I should have thought -- would be dealt with
in a v.2 in about a year. Obviously, that hasn't happened. And now
it's about two years.
So the fact is, I am getting nervous. I know I wouldn't want to be
trying to sell a two year old piece of software -- in computer terms
that's a whole generation old. Further, "v.1.4.1" spells "unsorted
newbie" in the computer world; v.2 is not much better -- from a
marketing PoV, there is a need to get to v.3 as speedily as possible,
I would suggest.
I've already watched Eudora, Canvas and Personal Organizer (and a
whole bunch of other programs) move into long periods between
upgrades, then finally disappear out the back door. I'm one of a
dwindling number of people still using them. I don't want to add NWP
to that list.
It is all very well for Martin, on behalf of Nisus, to say they "have
a policy", but my question then is "what for?" Does secrecy actually
help them? Are they afraid that a competitor will rush in and steal
their ground? Is that a realistic fear? But with nearly two years
gone, it's natural, surely, for those not in the know to wonder
whether the policy is there to protect stunning developments from
prying eyes -- or to conceal the king's naked state.
Best regards
Geoffrey Heard
Business writer, Editor, Publisher
The Worsley Press
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