Today’s release of the $14.99 Twitter client, Tweetie for the Mac, accompanied by a chorus of kvetching by the Twitterati about the price, spotlights the 800-pound gorilla in the Mac shareware space. The threat independent developers don’t want to acknowledge? Mac shareware prices are heading south.
Two weeks ago MacHeist3 came to a close. It was an unqualified success (at least for its organizers). For the two or three of you who missed it, MH3 was a heavily promoted bundle of indie Mac software, priced irresistibly to drive volume sales.
I couldn’t–and didn’t–resist it. For my $39, I got some 14 apps nominally worth close to $1,000 in aggregate at individual item prices. And to make me feel even better, a quarter of my $39 when to charity. Even if I use only one or two of the apps, I feel like I’ve gotten my money’s worth. I suspect most buyers feel the same.
What about the participating independent developers? I can only guess. In every case the unit price received by a given dev was but a tiny fraction of the “suggested retail” price (a realization that evidently drove away some potential participants). However, MH3 ended up selling 88,000+ bundles. I doubt that every buyer has registered every app in the bundle, but it seems likely to me that many participating devs have never seen registration numbers like these. If you’re one of these devs you’ve now got a REALLY BIG bunch of new users introduced to your software. Users who will (you hope) be predisposed to buy upgrades. Users who will be a prime–and primed–market for new apps you develop. From the developer’s POV, this looks like A Good Deal to me.
So where’s the downside?
Recalibration
It’s in user expectations. MH3 was a recalibration event, a punctuation mark in the equilibrium that until now has characterized Mac shareware prices. $15–Tweetie/Mac’s price point–used to be thought of as a pretty good price for a competent piece of Mac shareware. I’ve rarely thought twice about ponying up $15 or $20. Tellingly, the equivalent number on the iPhone seems to be closer to a couple dollars, perhaps just $0.99. What’s going on here?
The crazy success of the iPhone app store has attracted hoards of developers and wannabes; at the same time it has inexorably driven prices down–a fact much lamented and written about in the dev community. iPhone users quaver at the thought of spending more than a dollar or two on an app, even a competent and beautiful one. In a sense, the iPhone app market is a victim of its own success.
Tragedy of the Commons?
In the Mac app market, MH3 is the big success story de jour. Success stories like MH3’s don’t stand alone for long. You can bet that imitators are in the wings. How could it be otherwise? Sign up a bunch of hungry devs, price and time your bundle like it’s a fire sale, and promote the hell out of it. Users flock to grab the deal, and everyone walks away happy. Repeat++.
User’s price expectations keep ratcheting downward. If I can get a whole passel of nice apps for $39, why should I be willing to pay that for any single app? Why should anyone?
Am I overlooking something? Is this the inevitable tragedy of the Mac s/w commons? Or am I just having a fevered nightmare?
This should clear up any confusion:
KeyBindingsEditor is a GUI-based editor for OS X key bindings. It allows for easy editing and supports single-action bindings (one action per keystroke), multi-action bindings (multiple actions for a keystroke) and Emacs meta binding-style multi-keystroke bindings.
KeyBindingsEditor, a nice donationware utility written several years ago for OS X 10.4, seems to work fine in 10.5 as well. It’s basically a special purpose property list (.plist) editor, with one particular feature I find quite handy: it can export a keybindings file as nicely rendered html, ready to print. Great for making cheatsheets of all your personalized bindings in Xcode. Note that KeyBindingsEditor won’t open .pbxkeys files directly, but handles them just fine if the suffix is changed temporarily to .dict.
Cool tool. Habit-forming:
Readability is a simple tool that makes reading on the Web more enjoyable by removing the clutter around what you’re reading.
Paying for an app and discovering that it clearly does not live up to its App Store description is frustrating. What is far beyond frustrating is discovering that there is no support at all when you ask for help / clarification / news on possible updates.
This sort of thing gives a bad name to the whole iphone dev community.
Don’t be too surprised if Twitter suspends you (“suspicious activity”) for adding follows via a script, as described in this post. It happened to me, despite the fact that I throttled my script to send requests at the rate of about one every two minutes. All this probably resulted in a few too many block requests from users reporting me as spam in a relatively short period of time. I got reinstated quickly enough after explaining things to Twitter.
If you’re planning to follow a bunch of people this way, you might want to do it in small chunks spread over several days (although I’m not sure it will help if too many users decide to report you as spam).
Want monospaced fonts in Mailplane on your Mac? Try using this as a custom stylesheet, selectable via the Preferences:
.qIKyDc,
.mMl8gd,
.rSfjbb,
.iE5Yyc,
div.msg div.mb,
div.ArwC7c,
div.ckChnd textarea,
textarea.tb,
td.ct {
font-family: Monaco, monospace !important;
font-size: 12px !important;
}
Gathered from various net sources (such as this), and from poking around in existing stylesheets (such as this one). Easily customized.
UPDATE 3/8/2009: This appears to have been broken by a recent Gmail update; will have to track down the new correct CSS selectors…
I love Evernote. I use it constantly, especially to clip web pages for future reference. Today, the web clipper (“Quicknote”) bookmarklet in Safari acquired an annoying new behavior: if nothing is selected on the target web page, the clipper popup comes up empty, i.e., with all fields unpopulated, and with an incorrect default notebook (see image). A workaround is to first click on the web page content area and Select-All; easy enough, but annoying…

UPDATE: I initially misunderstood Quicknote as a bug; apparently it’s a feature.
Is the return of Steve Jobs the only thing that has shifted the competitive landscape in favor of Apple? No. If Steve Jobs were Microsoft's only problem, the company would be fine. Steve Jobs is actually less important to the second coming of Apple's Mac business than the decline of the Windows hegemony.
Short Takes
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An Unexpectedly Disturbing Thing
• Apr 20, 2009 •
An unexpectedly disturbing thing about our perception of a shocking event long after its occurrence: what we think we know is often wrong in almost every way.... #
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Scripts for Managing Windows in Xcode
• Mar 19, 2009 •
Matt Gallagher's Xcode scripts are surprisingly useful (if you're not a fan of Xcode's All-In-One window option). I don't run multiple monitors, so I incorporated Craig Hockenberry's simple bounds-grabbing ... #
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Twitterfall
• Mar 8, 2009 •
Twitterfall: great auto-refreshing tweet-following webapp.
Twittering...
- win the ultimate $10,000 canon 5d mk2 camera setup to celebrate the release of camera+ for iphone at wwdc http://tinyurl.com/camplus 2010-06-09
- A chance to win a free iPad, or 1 of 4 iPad games from @AmbrosiaSW! Follow us and RT to win! #Ambrosia http://bit.ly/ASWiPad 2010-04-06
- Sorry to my followers, but this offer of a FREE IPAD was just too good! Follow and RT to win! #Ambrosia http://bit.ly/ASWiPad 2010-04-05
- Win one of 20 Apple iPads given away by renowned company DreamHost! Enter here http://bit.ly/theipadcontest 2010-04-01
- @iphonedev07 ODROID for Android... makes me wonder... has anyone grabbed the names, ORDROID? EXORDROID? in reply to iphonedev07 2009-12-11
- More updates...