I was looking at the downloads section and noticed that the customer version of V4 (32 bit) was only downloaded 665 times at the time of this post. I found that low (certainly there are more people who have chosen to support Daemon Tools). I decided to look at the free version download section and I was amazed to see that it was downloaded 431660 times since it was offered. When I added in the 64 bit versions for both customer and non-customer versions the numbers were even worse. The combined download total of the 2 customer versions was a meager 835 while the combined download total of the non-customer version was a whopping 504086.
I did a little math and the download rate for the customer verion of V4 is at about 0.166 percent. So I dug a little deeper and included version 3.47 and numbers got even worse. The combined total for all 3 customer versions was 1283 compared to 18198796 for the non-customer versions. This works out to about 0.007 percent.
I know I don't have all the variables covered here (how long has this statistic been kept, etc.) but I do think it is indicative of how few people choose to register.
I only recently registered Daemon Tools, mostly because the DT Pro looks like it will be a kick ass proggy. After hanging out here for awhile reading posts, I can see how hard the developers work.
I initially guessed that DT Pro would have its own pricing and would cost around $30-$40 U.S. and I was willing to pay that much for a program that I use on a daily basis. I pay more than that for antivirus protection, firewall, and several other apps that I use. I guessed that around 10,000 new people would register the Pro version at $30 a pop, grossing the developers around $300,000 for the initiail release of the new version (not bad). Man was I wrong. First, no price increase for registering DT Pro (thanks) and it looks like my prediction of 10,000 new customers is going to be way, way low.
I guess the moral of the story is that it appears that putting the adware in the free version of V4 was not a greedy money grab opportunity but rather what was apparantly necessary to keep the development of this great software going. Oh , and the second moral is if you have $15.00 bucks (and most of us do) why not register Daemon Tools?
Flame away!!
I did a little math and the download rate for the customer verion of V4 is at about 0.166 percent. So I dug a little deeper and included version 3.47 and numbers got even worse. The combined total for all 3 customer versions was 1283 compared to 18198796 for the non-customer versions. This works out to about 0.007 percent.
I know I don't have all the variables covered here (how long has this statistic been kept, etc.) but I do think it is indicative of how few people choose to register.
I only recently registered Daemon Tools, mostly because the DT Pro looks like it will be a kick ass proggy. After hanging out here for awhile reading posts, I can see how hard the developers work.
I initially guessed that DT Pro would have its own pricing and would cost around $30-$40 U.S. and I was willing to pay that much for a program that I use on a daily basis. I pay more than that for antivirus protection, firewall, and several other apps that I use. I guessed that around 10,000 new people would register the Pro version at $30 a pop, grossing the developers around $300,000 for the initiail release of the new version (not bad). Man was I wrong. First, no price increase for registering DT Pro (thanks) and it looks like my prediction of 10,000 new customers is going to be way, way low.
I guess the moral of the story is that it appears that putting the adware in the free version of V4 was not a greedy money grab opportunity but rather what was apparantly necessary to keep the development of this great software going. Oh , and the second moral is if you have $15.00 bucks (and most of us do) why not register Daemon Tools?
Flame away!!
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