I am currently sitting in the Microsoft Blogger Lounge, which is a great idea if you get a thought while walking around the show floor. Kind of like I did now, which is why I am here.
I haven’t had the chance to get out on the main floor much as Mark and I have been very busy. Well, Mark is busy. There is a ton of interest in Nisus Writer Pro. So much so, in fact, that we are running out of materials to give away. That sounds bad, but it is good in lots of ways. We are able to show it to folks who are, quite frankly, very impressed by the new features. Bookmarks are a huge hit, as are Glossaries and Pro’s long document support.
Most are asking how much it will cost and a release date. We don’t have an answer for that yet. We will probably announce pricing when we release, if not sooner.
We have also been faced with some negativity. For example, we were surprised to learn that Pro will be Leopard only. That’s news to us, but many have told us that it is true. That’s just not the case. Some are upset that they will have to pay an upgrade price. We haven’t charged for one update of Express. That’s 3 1/2 years. Not that I am counting. Anyway, there will be an upgrade path. I know that will bother some people, but development costs money.
Some are also upset by our advertising. We have never claimed that Pro is all new. Just looking at it should confirm that fact. Omni does the same thing, does that mean their advertising is false? I don’t get this complaint.
The fact is, Express was conceived as a fairly simple to use word processor. Pro is the logical next step. More “professional” features, like more control over footnotes, Classic-like macros, the long document tools (TOC, Indexing, Cross References) and Bookmarks. Not to mention the attribute sensitive Find and Replace. The name Express just doesn’t fit with all of these new features. The name Pro makes more sense.
Anyway, enough negativity. Things at the Nisus booth are very positive. Good vibes, as it were. Hey, we are in hippy central, I can say things like that.
If you are in the area, you have one more day to bug us. Come on by, say hello, and have a look at the new software.
Oh, and bug Mark. He really likes that.