Archive for the ‘Binary Formations’ Category

Slight Diversion

Friday, September 3rd, 2010 by Kevin

Almost all of my spare coding time over the past five years has gone to Home Inventory. I had dabbled with doing a second application for Binary Formations, but never got past the early design stages when I realized I just would not have the time to support and update another app and Home Inventory.

Now that I work only part time at my day job, I have more bandwidth to work on Binary Formations than I did before. All of that time, up until recently, has gone exclusively to Home Inventory. The problem is that focusing on one thing and one thing only makes for a very dull programmer and I have been in desperate need for a palette cleanser, so to speak.

While I was on vacation a couple of weeks ago I came up with an idea for a very simple iPhone app that would help me deal with a personal situation I’m going through at the moment. When I say simple, I mean REALLY simple. I decided to give myself a week and a half (four full days, considering I do this part time) to build this thing. Initial coding was finished on Wednesday and after a few minor tweaks, the app is ready to be submitted to app store after it goes through one more round of testing.

I’ll write more about what it is and why I wrote it once it’s up on iTunes. Until then, take a look at some of the artwork below and see if you can figure just what the heck this thing is. Now it’s back to Home Inventory for me.

Juggler

Dunce Hat

Turning a Hobby into a Career – Part 1: Starting off Small, Real Small

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010 by Kevin

This is the first in series of posts that chronicles our efforts to transition Binary Formations from something we do on the side as a hobby to a viable business.

Burning Out Can Lead to Smaller and Better Things

I started Binary Formations almost five years ago as an outlet for me to develop software for the Mac. As a longtime Windows developer, I had become frustrated and bored with the platform. The pace of innovation was slow at best and Microsoft’s insistence on including software activation in Windows left a bad taste in my mouth (I did not appreciate being viewed as a would-be-criminal when I had already forked over my hard earned money for their crappy product).

At the time I was seriously considering leaving software development for another profession, so when my aging Dell laptop started acting flakey, I replaced it with a PowerBook G4. It didn’t take long before I was hooked. Though I had owned Macs before (back in the days of System 6 and 7, and again with the first release of OS X), they never really clicked with me. This time was different and I wanted to write something for it.

I decided to develop a home inventory application because I could not find one for the Mac that worked the way I wanted. Work on the app came in fits and starts as I slowly came out of my software development malaise and learned my way around Objective C and the Cocoa framework. Coding a few hours here and there in my spare time, Stockpile, as it was called at the time, slowly but surely inched toward completion. The first version was completed and released as a shareware application in late October 2005 where it went on to put up sales numbers so abysmally low, it would have left even the most pessimistic of pessimists disappointed. No doubt you are wondering just how low those numbers were. How does five copies through the end of the year sound? And one of those I bought myself to test the purchasing system.

I didn’t have a clue about marketing software back then (still don’t, truth be told), so my promotional activities were limited to building a VERY simple website and listing it on MacUpdate and VersionTracker. I wasn’t expecting to sell a lot of copies, but I certainly thought I would shift more than five in just over two months. It was disappointing and probably would have been the end of Binary Formations if it weren’t for the feature request emails I received from my tiny user base.

Good Customer Service is its Own Reward

My mother used to head up the customer service division of a printing company. She was serious about her work and believed (still does, actually) that if you are going to offer a product or service for sale, then your customers should get their money’s worth. Period. No Excuses. No Exceptions. She instilled those same values in me, which is why there was no way I could ignore those emails even though it would have been easy to say, “Hey, this thing is shareware. You got to try it before you bought it, so you knew what you were paying for.”

The features that were requested were relatively simple to implement and, truth be told, should have been in the product from the get go. They probably would have been in there if I had bothered to give enough thought to what other people might want out of a home inventory app. I added the features as quickly as I could and provided one off builds to a couple of users who didn’t want to wait for the update to be formally tested and released. This was customer service like Mom used to make. And it paid off.

Slowly but surely, my user base started to grow as that first handful of happy customers began telling others about Stockpile. I still wasn’t selling a lot of copies, but I liked talking with people who used my software and finding out what they liked and didn’t like, what they thought was missing, and how they used it in ways I had never thought of.

Unlike my day job, where I write software that runs in the data centers of some of the biggest companies in the world, developing and selling my little home inventory app was a much more intimate and satisfying experience. Finally I was writing software that I actually had a need for myself and I had this direct, unfiltered dialog going with many of the users who were all genuinely interested in helping me make the product better. Even though I wasn’t making much money from it, I was hooked.

Media Coverage At Last!

Friday, July 16th, 2010 by Kevin

As a natural born computer programmer, I suffer from many of the ailments that often plague others of my kind: painful shyness, a complete lack of any athletic ability, and a severe level of cluelessness on any and all things related to marketing. Not surprisingly, Home Inventory has received very little media attention, both online and in print. The coverage that we have received, and for which I am grateful, owes nothing to any effort that I have made.

When we released Home Inventory 2 earlier this year, my wife and I resolved to change this. Not only did we want to greatly expand the media coverage  for Home Inventory, we wanted to get reviewed (or at least mentioned) by some of the bigger players in the Mac media world, such as Macworld, Mac Life, Mac Format, and TUAW.

We have been sending out release announcements and contacting editors as far back as January of this year to no avail. My wife and I started joking that we were the Rodney Dangerfield of the independent Mac software world — we get no respect.

Well, all of that changed yesterday. Both Macworld and Mac Format posted reviews of Home Inventory, both giving us a 4 out of 5 rating. We were absolutely thrilled. Even better, some of our users have taken the time to add comments to the Macworld review letting others know they like our software and support, which we are most appreciative of.

If you want to take a look at the reviews, follow the links below:

Macworld Review

Mac Format/TechRadar Review

Our First Print Ad

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010 by Kevin

Okay, so this may sound a little lame, but I’m excited about it. Our first print ad is in the June issue of Macworld that hits newsstands today. It makes me feel like we’re a real company. Here it is:

Macworld Ad

New Website

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010 by Kevin

As you may have noticed, we have completely redesigned our website. Our two major goals with the new site were to create a less ‘dense’ look than the old site and make it easier to read through the product information. Hopefully we’ve achieved those. This is just the start. We have more additions to the website planned in the coming months.

Let us know what you think. Do you like the new site? Did you find any errors? Send an email to contact@binaryformations.com.

Thank You!

Sunday, February 14th, 2010 by Kevin

As we get ready to launch Home Inventory 2.0 tomorrow, we want to thank you, our customers! You have provided us with such valuable feedback, not only with the 2.0 beta and preview releases, but with all the previous releases. Thank you for taking the time to contact us and we thank you for the many kind words of support and encouragement. We are truly humbled.

New Blog Up and Running

Saturday, February 13th, 2010 by Kevin

Due to some of the worst customer service I have ever experienced in my life (and I’ve been on the receiving end of some truly awful customer service), Binary Formations has switched our web hosting provider from 1&1 to u2-web. There have been a lot of hiccups in this process on all sides — far more than necessary. I have to include myself in that mix because a stupid mistake on my part has made moving the content over from the blog on the old host to the new one a difficult task. Given that the release of version 2.0 is coming up in just a couple of days, starting the blog over from scratch seems to be the easiest approach. So, here it is… (cliché drumroll) the new blog.