beats me wrote:
During the initial public beta testing phase a lot more people saw it as a way to use a free preview of Live 8 than doing actual beta testing and reporting.
Now that people actually paid for it they're taking it a little more seriously, the users that is.
I think that's the case with every beta though, folks see it as an early preview of the latest and greatest.
True as it may be it is no excuse, and "where were you during beta testing?" is not an appropriate response to a user who has paid for a product that they can not use properly.
For those that want to beta test, I think that's pretty cool - but the bottom line is that it is absolutely
not the customers job to beta test a product they've paid for.
Furthermore,
it is Abletons responsibility to release an
at-least reasonably stable product before they start accepting payments from folks to the tune of hundreds of dollars.
I'm not implying that you are saying otherwise, beats, just stating my thoughts.
It's been the same exact thing for every upgrade cycle since probably version 5. New version released, folks bitch about stability, version becomes relatively stable just before the release of the new version. Unfortunately for the customers and for them it appears to have gotten away from them this time.
I think they've got a relatively huge problem on their hands both in the work to be done as well as the damage to their image and reputation.
Ableton has always been, for me at least, the rare sort of company that I felt as if I could get behind and feel a part of and proud to use - almost as if these people were friends. Fanboy if you will. A lot of folks still feel this way, but there are a lot as well, like me, who feel pretty slighted and lost that connection at some point over the last couple of years.
For Abletons sake and for the sake of the customers I sincerely hope they get a handle on this and get a stable product to the consumer. Then when all is said and done they need to get everyone into a conference room, conduct an extensive "lessons learned" post analysis, and learn from that shit.
It would be a true shame to see a company like Ableton continue down this path.