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Originally posted by El Barto:
**AS 1.5 is twice as good as Avara, and 5 times as good as the original AS.
And my opinion -> If Ambrosia isn't making any money out of it, and they refuse to make a sequal, then they should make it open source, and sell the rights to someone like MacSoft or Bungie or Aspyr. That way (if what they say is true) they will make SOME money out of it. Possibly. And if they don't, they won't lose any money.
El Barto**
That's one common misconception -- open sourcing a product/project isn't merely giving up the revenue from that product and giving the source code to people.
It's actually creating a support nightmare for the publisher -- when you release something to the public, despite your disclaimers, they will still often turn to you for support, and become angry if they don't get it.
People also associate the name of a product with the company that originally published it, and thus (again despite the disclaimers) new versions created by other people can be support issues for the original company.
Also simply the logistics of giving out the source code are problematic, support-wise. You can't just compress the source code and then upload it -- what happens when everyone and his brother downloads the code, and has a problem because of their inexperience or unfamiliarity with developing software?
Let's say you download the source code to product X, which was developed using CodeWarrior Pro 2. You have a more recent version of Code Warrior, and the source code doesn't compile. Many people will (they think reasonably) complain to the publisher who put the source code out there.
Do we hire a full-time developmental-savvy tech support person to handle such inquries/problems? Do we simply ignore people who write to us with problems compiling the code or using versions of the product others have compiled (doing so is a sure way to piss people off, and not exactly a wise thing to do).
These are just a few scenerios; I can tell you from experience that it is by no means a matter of "just releasing the code" -- it doesn't work like that, unfortunately.
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Andrew Welch / el Presidente / Ambrosia Software, Inc.