reMail seems interesting but I wonder what the chances are of Apple adding those features to their mail client and then simply locking reMail out of the App Store for duplicate functionality?
Xobni came to mind as someone who seems to have done something similar (remedy limitations in an existing implementation) but they weren't so very much at the mercy of Microsoft.
I'm also wondering how the economics of reMail will work out. The Redlaser article on the HN front page from today says they've had 750k downloads (albeit at $2 versus reMail's $3.99) but reMail seems more of a niche offering. Even assuming they near that amount, at $3.99, is it really a sustainable business model? I guess there's scope to upsell some other monthly services in there.
I also have to chuckle at $4.99 being considered 'premium'.
Thanks for your thoughts! Quick clarification: The App is free. The $3.99 price tag is for IMAP accounts.
We're not making millions of dollars on reMail (yet), but quick iteration is the key to success. We've rewritten the app once, then relaunched, then replaced its guts, then changed the business model, experimented with UIs and so on. Every time we do that more users start using the product. I guess the perception of Apps in the store is that most are one-hit wonders. Instead of cranking out a new app every two weeks, we're trying to make the one app we have better and better. I'll let you know how that worked out :-)
Xobni came to mind ... they weren't so very much at the mercy of Microsoft.
One of Xobni's biggest barriers to entry is the difficulty of developing for Outlook. However, that difficulty doesn't exist for Microsoft itself, so Xobni's always run the risk of MS simply packaging all their features into Outlook itself:
reMail seems interesting but I wonder what the chances are of Apple adding those features to their mail client and then simply locking reMail out of the App Store for duplicate functionality?
Xobni came to mind as someone who seems to have done something similar (remedy limitations in an existing implementation) but they weren't so very much at the mercy of Microsoft.
I'm also wondering how the economics of reMail will work out. The Redlaser article on the HN front page from today says they've had 750k downloads (albeit at $2 versus reMail's $3.99) but reMail seems more of a niche offering. Even assuming they near that amount, at $3.99, is it really a sustainable business model? I guess there's scope to upsell some other monthly services in there.
I also have to chuckle at $4.99 being considered 'premium'.