bitShifter Joins Apokalypse, Revamped/Pro Mori 1.7 Release Imminent, Cocoalogue: Our Smalltalk-based Scripting System, and a Cancer-Fighting Bundle

27 08 2008

As you can see, another bevy of announcements all bunched up in one. Did you feel like it was time to unwind? Nope. Me neither!

First off, an announcement that I put off while other things had to be wrapped up: Apokalypse Software Corp. has acquired the rights and the code to bitShifter, the file encryption utility initially developed and marketed by MemSculpt and then ForgEdit. As with prior acquisitions, the current licensees’ purchases will be honored, updates will be made, etc. I’m still trying to understand what some of these licenses were (perpetual what, now?), but they won’t be problematic as the key is in gaining more licensees rather than bleeding the current userbase dry with the nickel-and-dime tactics I despise so much.

However, the name and logo will need to be changed, as the original developer cannot relinquish them…or something. (bitShifter is vague and ambiguous or too techie sounding, anyway.) It is being revamped, and will be re-launched shortly as an Apokalypse product. The price will likely remain $99 USD if I can figure out what type of license that bought. (Perpetual what, again?)

Now that Apokalypse has encryption technology, I’m putting Mori 1.7 out with encryption ASAP. Unfortunately, this means some of the really cool features I originally planned to incorporate in the release will be delayed until 1.8, including enumerated entries, and continuous text. What’s still in? LinkBack, customized labels, font settings for source & entry views, better keyboard navigation, outlining improvements, self-downloading updates, and now encryption.

I’ve also gone over the features of quite a few of Mori’s competitors, and realize how undervalued Mori is. So I’ll be creating a version with fewer capabilities at the current price to stay at the lower end, and the price of the full-featured version will be raised to $99.95 USD. On top of that, a Pro version will be released at $199.95 USD. Mori licensees will automatically be bumped up to the Pro license when the update is released; so as I promised you before, you won’t have to pay extra for the 1.7 upgrades. In fact, as I’m still planning to put out a 1.8 release, current licensees won’t have to pay for any 1.X upgrades.

Next on the list is the big project I had been working on when I purchased Mori and Clockwork from Jesse. It’s a programming system based on the Smalltalk programming language and it’s called Cocoalogue. What’s so special about it? It’s an interpretive system, with programs written in a shebang-prefixed text file like most scripting languages available on UNIX-like platforms. The Smalltalk-based syntax is virtually identical to Smalltalk-80 with extensions for declaring classes, methods and data types (with strong- and static-typing). It supports dynamic run-time features including blocks, automatic garbage-collection and data translation. And it has, as the name Cocoalogue would indicate, a bridge to Mac’s Cocoa frameworks. I’ll go into greater detail on these features and Cocoalogue’s current limitations in my next post. This product hasn’t been released yet, and will be priced at $129 when it is.

But I’m making the announcement now for a very good reason. You’ll be able to get a licensed copy of Cocoalogue today before it’s made available anywhere else, including the Apokalypse website, through the PMC Software Build Your Own Bundle program. Seth Dillingham, another indie Mac developer, has put together a special bundle where you can purchase Cocoalogue, Mori, Clockwork or a family pack at discounted prices. You could even get a discount on over 120 other fabulous programs from Mac indie developers as well! Not that you want to.

So go on to the bundle site, remembering that it’s the only way to get in on Cocoalogue now, and for the substantial savings you’ll get on Mori Pro 1.7 by getting a Mori license today.

And don’t forget: these sales are going to fund cancer research and treatment, so please don’t be stingy on what are already terrific deals. A lot of folks are counting on you!


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8 responses to “bitShifter Joins Apokalypse, Revamped/Pro Mori 1.7 Release Imminent, Cocoalogue: Our Smalltalk-based Scripting System, and a Cancer-Fighting Bundle”

27 08 2008
YooPlace | Voila! (02:50:30) :

[...] } YooPlace » top | twitter rank | submit | loginmain | 日本語   Voila!(apokalypsesoftware.com)3 points by huperniketes 22 minutes ago | ! | linkAnd…I pulled the [...]

27 08 2008
SvenL (03:09:49) :

Good to see progress on 1.7 :-)

31 08 2008
Rolf Schmolling (02:36:00) :

Hi,
well, I am looking forward to see the new developments coming out… I wonder though what features will be in the “pro”-version to justify the price. Even though it will not be my problem personally, having a Mori-licence I think this is a lot of money. I can understand you interest in raising your net-income significantly, it (the higher price) might properly signal to play in another legue…

You might be thinking about Devon-products as a comparison to Mori and indeed there are some things not (yet) possible with DTP which are with Mori, still I wonder how you will be able to fare against a company with many more programmers, a big sales-department and advertizing-team. DTP 2.0 is supposed to come forward soon… Mori in general is much more flexible than DTP BUT looks much less polished, on the other hand DTP is “Aqua” but this is supposed to change with DTP 2.0.

Well, as I said, i am looking forward to see new and improved and stable bug(less)free stuff coming.

Greetings,

Rolf

8 09 2008
Schlaefer (15:34:47) :

I’m really curious: which applications in the 100 US$ realm do you compare Mori to? All I can think of (Macjournler, Voodoopad, Yojimbo …) is 40 US$ or *less*.

8 09 2008
Schlaefer (15:37:07) :

PS: Can you please make links in blog entries more visible. Thanks.

17 09 2008
jake4891 (14:40:23) :

99,95/199,95 for Mori regular and pro versions? You’re joking, right?

11 01 2009
Mark MIller (11:46:28) :

$99/$199 for the next version is not reasonable. The Pro price is $50 more than Devon Think Pro and user’s wallets will do the talking. As it is there hasn’t been an update to Mori in a long, long while … recent comments on MacUpdate indicate people are already moving away from Mori. I really like the product, but no way is any notes manager worth $99 for the basic version. I’m going to keep an eye here, but if the $99 price point is official I doubt I’ll stick around. I’d say a $49/$99 is about right.

8 02 2009
Jake4891 (13:34:39) :

Alfonso is Twittering some interesting stuff in my ears. He says a new version of Oneil touting Linkback support and improved printing options is close by. Watch the download site.

Also he tweets that owners of Mori get the future Pro version for free.

Seems good news to me.

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