If you have a message for WotC, please send it to WotC. They have their own message boards and e-mail addresses. EN World is not some official WotC communication dead-drop, or the like.
You're supposed to say "and counting." Don't make Thaumaturge angry.
Edit: For tyops.
Personally, I think the priority has to be licensing for third parties to produce adventures and whatnot (not that it really matters because it can easily be done under the OGL). Anything relating to electronic products like Hero Lab really isn't that important particularly as that has already been outsourced to a group that seem to be doing a good job of it. Getting the support of third parties like Necromancer is, to me at least, the number one priority.
Personally, I think this is not the best attitude.
I do agree that Trapdoor seem to be doing a good job, but you know what, pretty much every company producing digital stuff for D&D has seemed to do a good job until the stuff actually came out. It seemed like 4E was going to have vastly better digital support than it actually did, and it seemed like 4E's support was going to be more timely than it actually was.
Without an OGL to promote some form of competition (because WotC have been pretty aggressive in the digital realm when it comes to non-official stuff that actually does anything), we are effectively walking into a monopoly situation, just as with 4E, where there is little/no reason to provide a really great product, because you know people who want a digital product have no choice but to accept what you offer or have nothing.
That doesn't benefit the consumer, and in the longer-term, it doesn't even benefit WotC, I'd suggest.
You say getting the 3PP adventure publishers on board is #1 priority, and maybe it is, but the next priority of after that really has to be to allow others to produce viable software for 5E. Either way, the delaying of the OGL to next year, whilst understandable on a certain level, looks like it may potentially mean neither thing happens in a timely fashion.
While I agree with your sentiment, I do think that 5E will be a lot easier to create PCs with than 4E.
I can probably ignore the 5E tools for a long time and just create a simple spreadsheet for PC sheets that will handle the job.
With regard to feats, magic items, and monsters, again, the PHB, DMG, and Monster Manual will probably suit me just fine for a long time without the need for electronic assistance. If I get them in PDF format, then I have most of the electronic assistance I need.
WotC should be putting out excellent tools because I for one will not use them if they are not good (and hence, one less subscription), and I might not even purchase a lot of the additional source material if WotC is not going to have excellent tool support. I can probably play with the core 3 for a long time.
In today's internet and phone and laptop and tablet age, WotC had better get on the stick this time around, or they might end up losing even more market share. It would like shooting themselves in the foot (not that they have never done that before).
I want good digital support. I like physical books for reading at home, but I'm not going to back to lugging 3+ huge-ass hardbacks around (and 5E's are really huge!), and I want digital tools that make my life easy, rather than making me wonder if I should live nearer the photocopier place...
Personally, I think this is not the best attitude. (snip) That doesn't benefit the consumer, and in the longer-term, it doesn't even benefit WotC, I'd suggest.
You say getting the 3PP adventure publishers on board is #1 priority, and maybe it is, but the next priority of after that really has to be to allow others to produce viable software for 5E. Either way, the delaying of the OGL to next year, whilst understandable on a certain level, looks like it may potentially mean neither thing happens in a timely fashion.