Hi !
Your counterarguments take the financier's point of view. I think this is a mistake because the target, for me of course, is not some financier or investor but an average user (like people on this forum). The point of helping the cause is not to make money out of it in an investment kind of way. Than one could ask, why on earth would people give money if there is not a chance of receiving some ? The answer is that monetary investment could be rewarded by something else than money, something symbolic like, for instance, your name in the list of donors on the official web site or a unique pegasus mug sent to you with your name. Those are only examples, but I am sure with imagination, lots of possibilities are available.
I would like now to stop at your remarks regarding the arguments I offered. The first one is based on the long existing period of the program. Of course, it is not because something has existed for a long time that it should automatically be helped to go on. However for the case of Pegasus Mail, those 20 years of service show several points. First, if the program has been around for so long, it is because it was used for so long. Now, if people are using a program for 20 years, it cannot be the case that this program is without merits. In the case of email clients, it is all the more true because it is a domain or a sector afflicted with fierce competition, the proof of which is the demise of the late Thunderbird. So it may be the case that this is a good program and at least, it could sparkle the interest of the potantial user to try it. What those 20 years of existence also show is that a one-man-program has been able to hold its foot against team-programs by still being alive and more importantly still being actively used. This implies that the programer cannot be without some skills and above that without some (very) good ideas. An illustration of this point is given by my second argument with the invention of email filtering. Now some potential donors or users could very well be presented with a crowd funding project based on those ideas or the mind behind them with a long term goal of turning it into multiples through the building of a community which the present official site is an important element. Giving some money to sustain Pegasus Mail is to become a part of a community that has the opportunity to offer some "good" ideas in email management so that our lives could be easier. Maybe for some, that could be enough of a reward.
I turn now to one of your argument based on the interface of the program. I agree with you that it is not very friendly, and to be honest when I first tried the program, it was the main reason I quit. At the time, it seemed to me this was a program for very smart people, not normal people like me, so I left it where it belongs with experts and geeks. However, some years after this first experience, being still curious I gave it another shot because if it was for experts, then it must have been a really quite good piece of software, and I wanted something good to manage my emails. And this is when I realized, it was not so complicated, unusal maybe, but still in the reach of the "normal guy". After two days to familiarize myself, I uninstalled what other email clients I had and started to move all my emails. Now, I believe if the interface was not that unfamiliar, I may have succeeded the first time and that is the reason why I suggested several times to make Pegasus Mail a skinnable program. This way, users that are not programmers could very well participate directly to the program and it would be able to change the default unfamiliar interface to a more friendly one.
In the same spirit something that may proved useful would be some kind of video tutorial, ideally posted on YouTube or a similar web site, that would take the hand of the average Joe in setting Pegasus for the first time and providing some examples about filters and all the other stuff. This could be a major step forward in enlarging the user base (in my opinion).
As for what you said about the difference with the "humble claim presentation", I would say that to attract donors or make it work as a crowd funding project, one should stick to the facts. For instance, I agree with you that saying this is the best email client is not a general truth, but thet fact that it has been around for 20 years is. Building on that, one could "connect" with the donors by offering them piece of thinking in the form of questions like "If Pegasus has been around for 20 years, it cannot be that bad. What about finding out why such claim could be made ?". Again, I am throwing ideas and examples, and surely some more clever people would present them more efficiently (if those were ever considered of course).
Now the crowd funding put aside, a Twitter account and a Facebook page could be helpful.
Cheers !
<p>Hi !</p><p>Your counterarguments take the financier's point of view. I think this is a mistake because the target, for me of course, is not some financier or investor but an average user (like people on this forum). The point of helping the cause is not to make money out of it in an investment kind of way. Than one could ask, why on earth would people give money if there is not a chance of receiving some ? The answer is that monetary investment could be rewarded by something else than money, something symbolic like, for instance, your name in the list of donors on the official web site or a unique pegasus mug sent to you with your name. Those are only examples, but I am sure with imagination, lots of possibilities are available.</p><p>I would like now to stop at your remarks regarding the arguments I offered. The first one is based on the long existing period of the program. Of course, it is not because something has existed for a long time that it should automatically be helped to go on. However for the case of Pegasus Mail, those 20 years of service show several points. First, if the program has been around for so long, it is because it was used for so long. Now, if people are using a program for 20 years, it cannot be the case that this program is without merits. In the case of email clients, it is all the more true because it is a domain or a sector afflicted with fierce competition, the proof of which is the demise of the late Thunderbird. So it may be the case that this is a good program and at least, it could sparkle the interest of the potantial user to try it. What those 20 years of existence also show is that a one-man-program has been able to hold its foot against team-programs by still being alive and more importantly still being actively used. This implies that the programer cannot be without some skills and above that without some (very) good ideas. An illustration of this point is given by my second argument with the invention of email filtering. Now some potential donors or users could very well be presented with a crowd funding project based on those ideas or the mind behind them with a long term goal of turning it into multiples through the building of a community which the present official site is an important element. Giving some money to sustain Pegasus Mail is to become a part of a community that has the opportunity to offer some "good" ideas in email management so that our lives could be easier. Maybe for some, that could be enough of a reward.</p><p>I turn now to one of your argument based on the interface of the program. I agree with you that it is not very friendly, and to be honest when I first tried the program, it was the main reason I quit. At the time, it seemed to me this was a program for very smart people, not normal people like me, so I left it where it belongs with experts and geeks. However, some years after this first experience, being still curious I gave it another shot because if it was for experts, then it must have been a really quite good piece of software, and I wanted something good to manage my emails. And this is when I realized, it was not so complicated, unusal maybe, but still in the reach of the "normal guy". After two days to familiarize myself, I uninstalled what other email clients I had and started to move all my emails. Now, I believe if the interface was not that unfamiliar, I may have succeeded the first time and that is the reason why I suggested several times to make Pegasus Mail a skinnable program. This way, users that are not programmers could very well participate directly to the program and it would be able to change the default unfamiliar interface to a more friendly one.</p><p>In the same spirit something that may proved useful would be some kind of video tutorial, ideally posted on YouTube or a similar web site, that would take the hand of the average Joe in setting Pegasus for the first time and providing some examples about filters and all the other stuff. This could be a major step forward in enlarging the user base (in my opinion).</p><p>As for what you said about the difference with the "humble claim presentation", I would say that to attract donors or make it work as a crowd funding project, one should stick to the facts. For instance, I agree with you that saying this is the best email client is not a general truth, but thet fact that it has been around for 20 years is. Building on that, one could "connect" with the donors by offering them piece of thinking in the form of questions like "If Pegasus has been around for 20 years, it cannot be that bad. What about finding out why such claim could be made ?". Again, I am throwing ideas and examples, and surely some more clever people would present them more efficiently (if those were ever considered of course).</p><p>Now the crowd funding put aside, a Twitter account and a Facebook page could be helpful.</p><p>Cheers !
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