Glyfair said:
If accurate, that means the current numbers are below 10%.
Yeah. No doubt they've been in a low-ebb recently. But then, they have no one to blame but themselves.
But it was an amazing feat that they once did have 10% of the market. I think Dell was the only other single manufacturer to hold that much of the personal computer market, & their PCs ran Windows.
But that's tangenting on a tangent, so enough about that.
Dr. Awkward said:
So, you're suggesting that they'd be smart to charge Mac users extra for access to the DI?
Why not? It's been done before. Plunk a Mac surchange on the game table & other tools that aren't web content/PDF. Sure, you'll get some noisy
grumblers, but you'll also get a lot of Mac users who will silently & gladly pay.
Higher loyalty compared to what? Perhaps Mac users are loyal to Apple because they feel set upon by the Windows-dominated marketplace, but implying that Windows users are "disloyal," and that this is somehow a bad thing, and that Mac users possess some kind of general trait of loyalty that goes beyond their attachment to Apple, is kind of odd. You seem to be suggesting that if WotC adds Mac support to DI, it'll mean that the Mac users become loyal to WotC, whatever that might mean.
I'm not suggesting or implying anything. I'm telling you my experience.
So, you're saying that you think that WotC hasn't done any market research relating to the installed base of Macs among gamers and potential gamers, and hasn't done a cost/benefit analysis concerning the potential gains to be made on starting the DI with cross-platform support instead of adding minority operating systems later on? I think that's a funny thing to assume, given how much they've got riding on the success of the DI.
No, I'm not saying that. I'm saying that I have the experience from multiple successful products at different companies that cross-platform development isn't so hard & pays off more than I keep hearing people say. Perhaps Wizards has done the due dilligence, perhaps they haven't. Perhaps their analysis was flawed, perhaps it wasn't. I don't know. I merely sharing my experience with you. Take it or leave it, I don't care.
Also, if I were Wizards, I'd be considering this:
Tom: "Hey, let's get the old college group together again via this virtual game table!"
Dick: "They'd be great. Sorry I can't join in though. It isn't worth the hassel to set up dual-boot for that."
Harry: "I'm out too. Ever since we switched to Mac, the wife has baned Windows from our house."
Larry: "Maybe we should just use WebRPG?" (or whatever the popular free tool is these days)
Moe: "Yeah, it's not near as nice as the Wizard's game table, but it is free & cross-platform, so everybody could play."
Curly: "Hey, I don't have Mac or Linux, but free sounds great to me. I wouldn't know what I was missing anyway."