Posted August 20, 2020
jhAtgog: Hey no need to get all defensive, i was just asking friendly. :)
I agree that supporting two different ways of access would need more resources, if there are in fact two different ways, which i simply don't know, maybe you can enlighten me here?
The need for me, as you expressed it, "to suck up" something - well i disagree: i have the freedom to just not use Galaxy 2, which i gladly make use of, until they break 1.2 on the server side. Hopefully 2.0 will be usable by then, and if not - there are enough other shops around, so no big deal either.
Until then, i definitely won't spend any of my precious free time improving closed-source software for the commercial benefit of some web-shop. There are certainly better projects out there to spend it on.
JakobFel: Oh sorry, did I sound defensive? I didn't mean it that way, I was just trying to give a serious answer haha. But yeah, Galaxy 2.0 is basically a rewrite of Galaxy, at least as far as we know. Because of that, developing 1 and 2 concurrently would require a lot more resources. Shoot, it'd probably require two separate teams, given the fact that the 2.0 team would get used to its code and functionality after a while, making it harder for them to transition between the two if they didn't have two separate teams. I agree that supporting two different ways of access would need more resources, if there are in fact two different ways, which i simply don't know, maybe you can enlighten me here?
The need for me, as you expressed it, "to suck up" something - well i disagree: i have the freedom to just not use Galaxy 2, which i gladly make use of, until they break 1.2 on the server side. Hopefully 2.0 will be usable by then, and if not - there are enough other shops around, so no big deal either.
Until then, i definitely won't spend any of my precious free time improving closed-source software for the commercial benefit of some web-shop. There are certainly better projects out there to spend it on.
I agree that you have the freedom to not use 2.0. However, at some point, you will have to switch over and it's better to get used to it now, or at least start learning it, so that you know its full functionality by the time that you have to fully switch over.
The thing is, you can't hope for 2.0 to improve if you don't offer constructive criticism and feature requests. I mean, I don't do it very often myself, but I still occasionally submit bug reports, offer feedback and suggestions, etc. It doesn't take too much time. I know first-hand that GOG's team does pay attention to feedback. I mean, I had one of the devs on the 2.0 team PM me on Facebook after seeing a comment I made about how 2.0 still has a few kinks to work out. They asked me what problems I was having and if I had any particular, major bugs that I could report. They didn't have to do that, but they did. I feel like that says quite a bit as to how they view feedback.
Just because they're silent on the forums, that doesn't mean they're not seeing our feedback.
You are right, at some time i will probably switch over, just not at this early stage.
After all G2 (like G1) is a commercial product from a company that hopes to increase profit by providing convenience and ease-of-use. For me, that sounds like a fair deal for both sides, so i'm ok with that.
If this two-way deal gets out of balance, like in the G2 case where the user has to spend additional time and effort (bug-reporting and testing is usually something you get paid for), then the system is flawed and the deal is no longer fair and i won't play. Until GOG re-balances this (or until GOG has used enough of their customers time resource to have a product), i prefer to not use G2.
Yet i still hope that G2 improves, just not at my expense. You imply that this won't happen without my (well, our) feedback, i can't agree here. I assume what you meant is that i cannot _expect_ that G2 improves in a way I would prefer, and yes, you have a point there. But i'm confident that bugs will get fixed eventually and lost feature will get restored in one way or the other, after all, G2 is important for GOG, so they can't afford to not get it into release state.
They have my sympathy for providing DRM free games, that's why i buy stuff here after all, but i won't provide unpaid work on top of that.