Ok, since it’s the festive season, I’ll do the good news first before ranting a bit:
- You can now download PCalc Lite, a free and only-slightly-less-awesome version of PCalc for the iPhone and iPod Touch. It’s available on the App Store here.
- Despite being a new app, was approved by Apple in a mere three days from submission to being on the store.
And the bad news:
- Despite being a new app, the release date was set to the day of submission, the 16th, not the day it actually turned up on the store. So, it’s already on page 3 of Utilities and won’t get the “new app bump”. I don’t know if the release date trick works for new apps, but I’ve given it a try.
- PCalc 1.3, an update to an existing app, is nowhere to be seen, lost in the submission queue. Well, so much for publicising them together.
- It’s almost impossible to plan a product release in advance with the App Store. I mean, don’t get me wrong, a three-day turnaround on a new app submission is really good to see. It’s just that it could have easily turned up next year. I was taken by surprise this morning and was scrambling to update the website at 8am.
Ok, let’s back up a little bit and talk about PCalc Lite. My PR spiel for the release says:
Available for a limited time only, PCalc Lite is a fully functional and free taste of our popular scientific calculator for the iPhone and iPod Touch.
It includes an optional RPN mode, multiple undo and redo, unit conversions and constants, as well as two stylish themes and our highly praised design.
If you like what you see, the full version has many more settings and themes, a paper tape, engineering and scientific notation, and full support for hexadecimal, octal and binary calculations.
In the continuing absence of demos or trial periods in the App Store, the idea behind PCalc Lite is to provide something useful and free that’s better than the Apple calculator, but which will also drive interest in our full version. PCalc Lite is a great calculator, but PCalc is even better!
So yes, it’s basically an advert for PCalc, but it’s actually a pretty solid calculator in its own right and miles better than the default Apple one. And did I mention it was free? So, everybody should go and download it. I can say it’s awesome all I like, but just go try it and see what you think yourself.
This is of course, another in a long line of big marketing experiments. I’ve given away something significant with the hope of making more money by doing so. The real question is, have I got the right balance between removing functionality and making it useful, so it doesn’t completely kill sales of the full version?
As the old line goes:
How do you carve a statue of an elephant? Start with a block of marble, and remove everything that doesn’t look like an elephant.
So, I took PCalc and chipped away at all the features. I decided early on to keep the RPN mode which is probably the most dangerous decision. It’s something that makes it quite distinct from the Apple calculator, but it’s also an important selling point to a lot of people. I figured if I took it out, people might say that there’s no reason to download PCalc Lite over the Apple calculator in terms of features. I’d disagree politely, of course. But some of my beta testers expressed the concern that with the RPN mode in there, PCalc Lite does everything they need and they wouldn’t need to buy the full version.
All of the other options are gone, with the exception of the “easier to read digits” option and two themes. I made a new “Twilight” theme to be the default for PCalc Lite, mainly because I needed to create a distinct new icon for it, and wanted them to match. Attention to detail and all that. In the end, I ultimately added the theme as an option in the full version of 1.3 as well, as it looks pretty sweet.
I also trimmed the constants and conversions down by half, taking out all but the basics, and adding a small polite note in those sections saying you can get more in the full version.
Hex, octal and binary modes gone. Tape and stack / register display gone. Two-line display gone. Engineering and scientific notation gone. Even thousands separators. I took a positively Jobsian approach to the removal of options and features.
But the core user interface is all intact, so you should be able to get the feel of the application which I think is very important. Like the way undo and redo is implemented with swipes on the LCD, or the way the parentheses display works. The subtle details that make the difference, or so I hope.
Many of my testers commented that I should keep all the features in there, but if you tapped on anything outside of the Lite stuff, I should throw up an annoying alert saying that it’s only available in the full version.
That’s tempting, but I don’t think Apple would allow it into the store. As it is, I thought I was sailing close to the wind, given that @chockenberry had already told me about the problems they’d had with the free version of Twitterific. I think it might be different for PCalc because my Lite version isn’t ad-supported, it’s just plain free. Or I might have just been lucky.
But it was important to me to make something that was a complete product in its own right, with some gentle upselling to the full version. I’m hoping that decision will make PCalc Lite very popular, perhaps even Top 100 popular in the free apps section if I’m lucky, and I’ll make the sales up due to the sheer number of people exposed to the wholesome PCalc goodness.
I’ve said it’s only available for a limited time, but to be honest, that depends on how popular it is, and what it does for sales. If sales nose-dive from the get go, it’s going to be pretty darn limited. If sales go up significantly, then I don’t see any reason to remove it.
So, today will be spent promoting PCalc Lite, trying to give it a good start in life, and hoping this form of altruistic capitalism pays off. Wish me luck!
UPDATE – 2pm GMT
Yes, the release date trick works even for new apps! Currently PCalc Lite is on the front page of the new releases in the Utilities section of the iPhone store, though the iTunes view hasn’t updated yet. I expect it will as data gets pushed out to the servers. Ok, now to try and get some press coverage…
UPDATE 2 – 8pm GMT
Oh, App Store, you are so loveably unpredictable! I just got an email there saying that the full PCalc 1.3 release is also now approved and “Ready for Sale”. I’ve never had one of those emails at this time of day before. I wonder if somebody in Apple reads this blog?
Anyway, it’s not appeared on any of the stores as yet, but presumably it will be there soon. I’ll wait before updating pcalc.com though.
Of course, I sent out all the PCalc Lite PR emails about four hours ago, and Macworld has run a story at least so far. I can’t really send out another one now. Will assess the situation tomorrow I think…
Hi James,
Leaving access to all features in the lite version, but putting up a message that a particular feature is only available in the paid version does work. HiCalc lite does exactly that, and is available in the App Store along with its full featured, paid version.
Well, there’s very mixed messages on what you can and can’t do it seems – I was explicitly told you couldn’t do that kind of thing. But I also think that kind of thing is just plain annoying to the user, so I’d avoid it if I could…
I agree with you about it being annoying. In fact, I’ve just deleted a couple of “free” apps for that very reason. In any event, I find PCalc to be worth every penny of its price; and even if you decide to drop the price to attact buyers, I’ll not feel bad about paying a higher price for it. Programmers deserve fair compensation; especially programmers like you who are thoughtful, engaged with their audience, and produce first rate work.
Thank you, that’s very nice to hear!
No plans on dropping the price – my hope is that PCalc Lite will suit the few people who complain about PCalc being too expensive, and everybody else will be as supportive as you!
Good luck with your ongoing PCalc sale experiments … I bought PCalc pretty well as soon as I found it some months ago, for the “42” logo 😉 and for the HEX features.
I’ve tried another since, but prefer yours and would recommend it. Must admit though, I mostly still pick up my TI calculator (it’s quicker to “turn on” than iPhone/PCalc).
I was just notified that the 1.3 update for my full version of PCalc was available from the app store. So I downloaded and installed it.
All I can tell you though is that I was a little hesitant to get PCalc for my iPod Touch. When I saw that there was a lite version, I played with it for a while then quickly got to the conclusions that I HAD to have the full one 🙂
re Pcalc on iPod touch.
Quickly needed the full version, Lite was far too lite.
Funny that only a few constants have units. (A few masses and the speed of light).
It would be really useful to be able to put one’s own constants in. I have the permittivity of free space (I do a lot of capacitance calculations) in my HP32 as a memorised constant that I never over write. By the way, only one memory slot, why’s that?
Don’t loose the RPN or I’ll never use it again.
Great to have the various bases like my HP. Often use binary and Hex. Not much call for Octal since I gave up using a PDP11 36 years ago.
You mention using the gamma function for calculating factorials but I can’t find the factorial function. Is this only on the Mac version? Not that I have needed it recently.
Keep up the good work, it’s much appreciated.
Tony