Jerry Saperstein wrote:

        Criticism of Revolution generally apparently is generally
disapproved of here. I've seen a number of valid criticisms dismissed in the
same way as yours have been.

Criticism of specific features is often valid and usually results in two responses, neither of which is dismissal:

- a request to log it in Bugzilla

- an exploration of the goal so we can help find alternative solutions to move your product development forward in the meantime


What gets dismissed is the notion that because one specific thing isn't in place the way someone wants it that whole ranges of software categories are impossible.

That's like saying that because my car doesn't have GPS I can't drive it to the store. It's simply a non sequitur, and somewhere between insulting and laughable to those of us who make applications for business environments.

If these assertions stuck to specifics the argument would be supportable and the conversation more productive. But to dismiss all of our work with a wave of the hand and a "harumph" will likely yield the same in response.

Respect is earned for the low price of showing some to others.


But your point is valid: Revolution is not well suited for business
needs.

"Business" is pretty broad, and no doubt one could defined it in ways that might make Rev look insufficient.

But evidently it can be defined in other ways as well, since many business make, sell, and buy Rev-based apps, and report a high degree of satisfaction and a strong ROI at all levels of that chain.

I'm sure you've seen Rev's Case Studies page:
<http://www.runrev.com/section/case_studies/>

True, RunRev's done a crappy job of cataloging all of the professional apps out there, but even as a small cross-section there's some interesting stuff there.

My humble WebMerge app is used by Macworld Magazine, BMI Music Publishing, the American Bar Association, and the US Library of Congress.

The HyperRESEARCH product I develop for Boston-based ResearchWare, Inc. has multiple licenses in use at Microsoft and dozens of universities.

Last year I built an Internet-based CMS for doctors on three continents to contribute editorial content to a medical database to be published in early '06, with both the CMS and the final product built in Rev.

Over the summer I built a tool for use in pediatric emergency clinics for calculating dosages and equipment sizes for patients.

Chipp can tell you stories of apps he's built wih Jerry Daniels for the Texas Department of Corrections, and quite a few medium- to big-businesses use his Hemmingway CMS.

Ken Ray develops the most comprehensive PIM focused on the needs of talent agents, used by many of Hollywood's top agencies.

Jacque Gay has made tools for law firms, and a medical database that calculates drug interactions.

Phil Davis contributed to the world's most comprehensive holistic database used in hundreds of clinics across the nation, and is currently working on an app for the lumber industry.

When you see the movie Narnia, note the tents -- those were made by a company in New Zealand who's one of the world's largest tent manufacturers, whose business is run on a system built in Rev by Paul Looney.

I once worked with a company that made sales presentation systems in Rev for Sun Computing.

And that's just off the top of my head.  There are many, many more.

Sure, each of these apps could be enhanced in all sorts of ways to make them even better, and enhancements to Rev would make it that much easier.

But these apps exist, so evidently it's possible to make them.


To move the conversation back to a productive focus, what specific challenges have you faced, and how may we help you overcome them?

--
 Richard Gaskin
 Managing Editor, revJournal
 _______________________________________________________
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