Alex wrote:It's not just a question of the mobile data. It's simply a matter of the fact that if we ever had a mobile app that syncs with our pedias in any way, the Desktop applications would no longer be able to talk to Amazon in any way so we'd really be "punishing" a lot more users.
Hi Alex,
I'm not sure it would be much of a loss to DVDpedia users if Amazon data was entirely excluded from the desktop AND the iPad versions. As alwaysbetterinhawaii (!) says, the Amazon movie data is incomplete, innacurate and largely useless anyway, compared with the IMDb data.
If the 4 pedias were treated as separate programs, Amazon could be retained for the other three and DVDpedia could be unique in that it had no connections with Amazon at all. That would solve the problem of a mobile app synching with DVDpedia. For ages now I have not added any DVDs to my collection using Amazon, but prefer to add them from the way more accurate IMDb and I am sure many other users would feel the same.
It does seem as if the 3 other pedias are wagging the dog here - I fully understand why Amazon is crucial to the other pedias, but it just plain is not crucial to DVDpedia. I suspect that Amazon will *never* allow you to synch with a mobile device which means that, under the current stance, we will never get an iPad version. Developing your own database is a laudable objective, but it will never be as comprehensive or as credible as the IMDb database. It is that link which makes DVDpedia a credible and reliable cataloguing tool for people like me who has a substantial collection which grows almost daily.
Please don't take this in any negative way - I am the strongest supporter of DVDpedia and the program is my most used Mac application after Safari and Mail. The iPhone version is/was excellent but is limited by the screen size. One only has to look at IMDb's own iPad App to see the potential for an iPad DVDpedia. The ability to have a fully usable DVDpedia *on my lap* while actually watching a movie would be stupendous.
Thanks for listening, as always.
Kind regards,
Keith