[comp.sys.mac] APDA Perspectives

mjohnson@Apple.COM (Mark B. Johnson) (05/04/89)

The following is a copy of Wendy Tajima's "Perspectives" article
which appears in the April APDALog.  It is posted here for those
of you who have not yet received your copy.

Perspectives

by Wendy Tajima

Some of you have been wondering, "What are Apple's plans for 
APDA? What's the significance of bringing APDA in-house?" A 
few of you have theorized on Apple's motives, both positive 
and negative, on the bulletin board systems which requires 
further clarification on our part.

The Transition

Seems like old news now, but our winter here in Developer 
Channels was spent planning for the transition of APDA 
services from the A.P.P.L.E. Co-op (now called TechAlliance) 
to Apple Computer. The transition was relatively smooth, 
though we're still transferring customer information and 
sales history to our internal system in an effort to find out 
as much as we can about you and any outstanding issues you've 
had with APDA. Some of you have updated our customer service 
representatives on your particular situation and we hope 
we've been able to correct any problems you've brought to our 
attention.

Our "grand opening" was a great success. We've gained 2,000 
new customers, added some new products, and had a wonderful 
time meeting many of you in person at the January Macworld. 
(We're also looking forward to meeting you Apple II and IIgs 
programmers and developers at the next AppleFest in May.) 
Starting with the APDA Town Meeting (which will be held at 
all major trade shows) and with calls and letters coming in 
to us, we're getting a good sense of your concerns and needs.

We Care What You Think . . .

Getting your direct feedback is exactly why we brought APDA 
in-house. We believe that the next wave of computing is in 
end-user programming and we need to hear directly from 
programmers now about what we should be doing to meet their 
needs in the future.

Within the roots of Apple's own company history is a strong 
tradition of enthusiast programming with the Apple II. We now 
see an increase in the number of Macintosh users starting to 
create their own applications, often through HyperCard and 
HyperTalk. We hear from novice programmers and students 
interested in learning how to program almost as much as we 
hear from non-Apple MIS managers who want to see what the 
Macintosh has to offer them.

Specifically, we'd like your opinions on issues such as:

* what types of development products you'd like APDA to carry
* services and referral networks APDA could manage for you
* balancing cost vs. production quality
* product variety and timeliness vs. the costs of
  frequent revisions.

. . . and We Will Respond (When We Can)

Your questions and ideas are important to us. Listed below 
are some changes that we've made in response to your 
comments.

We must qualify this, first, by saying that even though we're 
now part of Apple, we do face certain constraints. Some of 
these constraints include Apple's desire to run APDA as a 
"break-even" business in light of:

* higher cost structures due to geography and higher
  production quality standards
* streamlining the APDAlog by eliminating advertising
* continuing to grow the APDA customer base so that all
  programmers and developers, including novices and
  hobbyists, have equal access to APDA products and services
* maintaining an ever-expanding and frequently-revised
  product line to ensure that our customers have access to
  the most up-to-date tools.

This has required certain changes in our pricing and business 
policies, but these are always under review to be sure we are 
meeting your most critical needs.

New Products

We are happy to introduce over 30 new products to the APDA 
product line in this APDAlog (see "What's New This Issue" 
column in the April APDAlog for a complete list), including 
some new growth areas:

* New networking and communications products, especially for
  programmers in multi-vendor environments. These products
  include MacWorkStation v. 3.1, MacTCP, MacAPPC, and the
  Apple Communications Library, a communications-oriented
  line of technical books written by Apple Computer and
  published by Addison-Wesley. Also new are the APDA single-
  use licenses for MWS 3.1, MacTCP, and MacAPPC to ease the
  evaluation process for these products before making a site
  licensing commitment.
* Macintosh Allegro Common LISP, developed by Coral Software,
  which is the most popular fully symbolic LISP environment
  on the Macintosh.
* Macintosh Sample Source Code, compiled by Apple's Developer
  Technical Support group. This is in direct response to
  customer requests for sample code. We anticipate providing
  sample code disks in a subscription manner similar to our
  technical notes.
* GS/OS References, Volumes 1 and 2, the first technical
  documentation for the new GS/OS system software for the
  Apple IIgs.
* Third-party products to expand our product offering with
  BASIC and Ada compilers (see Rick Fleischman's Third-Party
  Action Line column in the April APDAlog which discusses
  third-party products).

New Services

We are also introducing new services to meet customer needs:

* We now honor the American Express Card. This should be
  especially useful to customers who have company American
  Express cards.
* We have added a toll-free phone line for Canadian
  residents. The number is (800) 637-0029. Other
  international customers can call (408) 562-3910.
* We now offer for U.S. deliveries your choice of UPS Ground
  or 2-day Air Express. UPS Ground can take up to seven
  working days, coast-to-coast, but it is approximately one-
  third the cost of 2-day Air. Those wishing overnight
  delivery can still pay the $10 premium charge added to the
  2-day Air rate.
* We also now deliver to APO, FPO, and Post Office Box
  addresses via U.S. Mail. 
* We are currently working with Apple International Traffic
  to develop more options for international deliveries. We
  hope to have this worked out by the summer APDAlog.

New Prices

Finally, you may notice that we have reduced the prices of 
certain products where we could find cost savings and great 
demand from our customers. Specifically, we have lowered 
prices for Apple II and Macintosh technical notes, as well as 
some of the most popular third-party products. We also 
reevaluate pricing with changes in products, such as the 
internalization of Macintosh Allegro Common Lisp.

APDA offers technical notes on a subscription basis for the 
convenience of our customers. We have streamlined our 
packaging for these products in order to cut our costs and 
pass the savings on to you. These technical notes are the 
same notes that are sent automatically to Apple Certified 
Developers (now called Apple Partners), and are available 
without additional charge on many networks and bulletin 
boards, including AppleLink, BIX, MacNet, and GEnie. Finally, 
several large users groups get them, including those in 
Boston, Atlanta, and Washington D.C.

Some of you have noticed that our third-party product line 
has been priced at the vendor's suggested retail price. We 
chose this approach in order to maintain a non-competitive 
position vis  vis third-party distributors of technical 
products. We want to encourage open availability of third-
party development products, so we do not get into price 
competition with other distributors such as TechAlliance or 
Computerware. We offer a wide range of third-party products 
for your convenience, not to raise APDA profits.

When Apple acquired Macintosh Allegro Common LISP (formerly 
from Coral Software), we restructured the product to allow 
for greater accessibility of this powerful object-oriented 
development environment. We have bundled several Allegro 
utilities such as the Foreign Function Interface and Stand-
Alone Application Generator, and cut the price to $495 
(compared to Coral's list price of $600). As with our other 
high-end development products, we also offer a 40 percent 
volume discount on purchases of 20 units or more. We hope 
this helps to compensate for the restrictions on support 
since the acquisition.

APDA now offers group customer accounts. The addition of the 
group account was initiated to allow corporations, schools, 
and government agencies to set up a single master account 
with APDA while allowing for more than one user to access the 
account. Unless otherwise notified, we send the APDAlog to 
the master address; needs for multiple APDAlogs at a single 
or multiple addresses should be discussed with our customer 
service representatives.

Price Protection

With these pricing changes, you may wonder what happens if 
you'd purchased products at the higher price from APDA. For 
these customers, we are offering a new price protection 
policy, whereby customers who have purchased these products 
from APDA since January 1989 can receive credit for the 
difference in price against their future purchases. To take 
advantage of this policy, please send us a copy of your 
packing slip or, if you don't have this handy, write or call 
us and we'll process your credit.

Future Plans

As we look into the future, we see some exciting products 
ahead for APDA. We anticipate C++ for MPW coming later this 
year, as well as some terrific new HyperCard development 
tools. The A/UX product offering should expand with 
additional third-party languages and Apple documentation. And 
we'll continue to seek out new third-party products that fill 
special customer needs or provide leading-edge development 
technology. We are also considering  services we can provide 
to programmers, including providing technical sessions or 
APDA Town Meetings at trade shows, and making more technical 
information available. 

We are always looking for ways to improve and expand APDA 
services. We especially appreciate your ideas, suggestions, 
and constructive criticism. APDA is definitely here for you, 
the programmer and developer, and we can act as your 
advocates within Apple. Let us know how we're doing!

About the Author
Wendy Tajima is APDA Marketing Manager.


Mark B. Johnson                                            AppleLink: mjohnson
Developer Technical Support                         domain: mjohnson@Apple.com
Apple Computer, Inc.         UUCP:  {amdahl,decwrl,sun,unisoft}!apple!mjohnson

"You gave your life to become the person you are right now.  Was it worth it?"
                                                         - Richard Bach, _One_

thrash@jolnet.ORPK.IL.US (Richie Tozier) (05/05/89)

  I am curious how would you go about getting an applelink account anyway?
im interested in it...thanks..

Thrashing Rage / TVH            | I'll tell you once, I don't mess around
                                | I'll do what I can to bring you down
UUCP: {killer!}jolnet!thrash    | Your loud-mouth approach won't get you far
ARPA: bellcore@csustan          | You're beyond reproach; you're among the gods