Nowhere did Dennis' Announcement say that we were taking on the Image Pixel Editing space. We're not. He was speaking to greater editorial decision making that Photo Mechanic already does (rating, classification, metadata entry, selection and culling).
We're sorry if that wasn't more clear.
-Kirk
Well, there is this sentence here from Dennis....
"As the development of the Catalog feature progressed, we decided to pursue a related avenue of innovation that provides for a suite of photo editing solutions."
If Dennis was talking about a new app that does rating, classification, metadata entry, selection and culling, PM already does that. Brilliantly.
It has been my deepest hope that CameraBits did not follow Adobe, Apple, Phase One, and numerous others, in developing apps that combine photo editing with photo cataloging. I would seem to be the case you are going that direction.
If you are delaying the release of the new product so that it can have features that PM already has, then you've missed the boat. I don't need another app for that. I want an app that can track results of what was done in PM, so I can search for them later. Pretty simple really. All the cataloging app has to do is be able load the PM metadata into a database so that I can search on that data. It should provide the results in a PM-style contact sheet, with right-clicks to the editor of my choice. Period. that's all it needs to do.
You have been saying for years that the catalog is on the way. The latest announcement, along with your clarification, is basically this: "we need another half a year or so because we want want to add editing features kinda like PM."
I made the decision last June to commit myself to cataloging my photos by the end of the year. I've carefully been adding lots of metadata in PM towards that goal, but not sure where the final output was going to be. In October's announcement, it sounded like you were had something to show. I didn't see it. But my love and loyalty for PM gave me a reason to delay commitment to a CB competitor.
Every single day you delay this release, some of your potential customers lock into long-term deals with your competition.
If you are financially unable to commit to the resources necessary to put a new product out, then say so. Your loyal customers won't hate you for that. But endlessly stringing them along is no way to treat your most loyal and vocal customers.
Your market of prospects shrinks every time your competitors make a sale. Show something. Prove that you even have something that is truly different than the competition. Or not.
Ron