Vaporware
Vaporware is a software or hardware product which is announced by a developer well in advance of release, but which then fails to emerge, either with or without a protracted development cycle. The term implies unwarranted optimism, or sometimes even deception; that is, it may imply that the announcer knows that product development is in too early a stage to support responsible statements about its completion date, feature set, or even feasibility.
Origins
The term originated with magazine reviewers in the late 1970s/early 80s, originally as a spoof on software marketers' tendency to attach "-ware" to whatever noun described the application of their products.
At that time the personal computer market was in its infancy, and it was common for computer manufacturers to supply the software that ran on them, which would rarely work on other manufacturers' machines.
Software development would often lag behind the development of the system's computer hardware. As a result, some computer manufacturers advertised extravagant software packages that allegedly came with their machines, but had not yet been completed, or in some cases, hardly begun, in an effort to sell their hardware and encourage further software development.
Hoaxes
There is a similarity between vaporware and a species of hoax: both involve promoting a product or event which cannot later be produced. There have been a number of hoaxes in technological fields, wherein the hoaxer promises that proof of his offering will be forthcoming -- eventually.
Examples include any number of perpetual motion machine "inventors". The distinction may be that in vaporware, the proponent truly does intend to produce the advertised product, while in hoax, he knows the product does not exist, cannot be produced, or that he will not do so.
Types
Anticompetitive practices
The marketing angle to "releasing" vaporware can be two-fold. On one hand the intention is to create the demand for a feature or product which did not previously exist in the market. On the other, the intent is also to judge the public reaction from the "release" and prepare a concrete marketing plan. Say if a virtualization software's vaporware causes ripples in Slashdot but not in industry journals, the executives responsible may feel the need to reposition the product, or even to go back to the drawing board and redesign and reach the target audience. In some cases, vaporware may be the result of a trial balloon which "doesn't fly". Subsequently the project is quietly cancelled, sometimes before any actual development work is done.
In other cases, vaporware may be announced by companies in order to damage the development or marketability of more real products by competitors, sometimes in combination with a campaign of fear, uncertainty and doubt; if customers believe the hype, they may put off purchasing the real product to wait for its vaporous rival to mature.
Another illegal use of announcing vaporware is to cause an uptick in the stock prices of a publicly traded company. This can then be used to gain more investment capital or allow officers of the company to sell shares on the "hype" of the software that may or may not ever be completed. (see pump and dump).
Allegations of anticompetitive vaporware, as well as concerns within the software industry prompted David Dranove (of Northwestern University) and Neil Gandal (of Tel Aviv University, University of California, Berkeley) to conduct an empirical study designed to measure the effect of the DIVX preannouncement on the DVD market. This study suggests that the DIVX preannouncement slowed down the adoption of DVD technology. According to Dranove and Gandal, the study suggests that the "general antitrust concern about vaporware seems justified."[1]
Overambitious hype
Many companies announce vaporware in order to prove that their R&D departments are still full of new ideas. One subtle variation of this strategy is to remove a planned feature of a forthcoming product.
Sometimes vaporware is the result of over-optimism , and may actually materialize after a long waiting time (sometimes years). One example of this was the long-delayed Apple Macintosh word processor FullWrite Professional, announced by Ann Arbor Softworks in January 1987 for delivery that April, and actually delivered in late 1988.
In the United Kingdom, Sir Clive Sinclair's Sinclair Research Ltd was quite notorious for its tardy product delivery cycle; various flat-screen displays, miniature televisions, the Sinclair QL business computer and Sinclair C5 electric car, the advanced Loki and several other projects were either late, unfinished, or entirely fictitious.
Several years before CD-R was introduced, Tandy Corporation had promised a fully recordable CD format called Thor-CD,[2] but after being pushed back for several years, it was finally shelved due to technical limitations, and then became known as "Vapordisc".
Sometimes the delays or eventual shelving of a software product maybe caused by a corporate merger or internal strife within the company.
Peter Molyneux earned the dubious reputation of promoting games with lofty goals, such as Dungeon Keeper, Black & White, Fable, and The Movies, but often ended up having to remove copious amounts of features due to release date pressure or system limitations.
One of the most famous pieces of Vaporware is Duke Nukem Forever promised in 1997, and not yet released in April, 2008.
Falls short of expectations
This category refers particularly to products that may not be inherently flawed or defective, but rather fail to fulfill the high expectations of the consumers who have been subjected to aggressive marketing campaigns and constant hype from either the company itself or the media who reported about it in the period leading to release. Delays on such products have been known to inflate to months and even years, creating often unrealistic expectations of the final version once it eventually reaches store shelves.
The biggest example of this is the computer game Daikatana, which was announced in 1997 but did not ship until 2000. Many who had waited felt the gameplay was disappointing. Ultima IX was released to savage reviews in 1999, due to numerous bugs, unbalanced gameplay and high system requirements.
Obsolete on delivery
In other cases, vaporware never materializes because some other product fills its niche in the meantime, rendering it redundant or unmarketable.
One example is Project Xanadu, a hypertext project started in 1960 whose intended role has been mostly filled by the World Wide Web.
The Spartan was possibly the first, classic example of vaporware in hardware. It was an Apple II emulator for the Commodore 64 that attached to the back of the computer and added a full complement of Apple II expansion slots and I/O ports. At the time of its announcement, the Apple II had the largest software library of any home computer, while the Commodore 64 was a relative newcomer. A C64/Spartan combination would have had a price advantage over the Apple II, in addition to its C64 capability. By the time of the product's release, however, over two years later, the 64 had matured into a wildly successful platform in its own right, and few of its users cared about Apple compatibility.[3]
Another is Silicon Film, a proposed digital sensor cartridge for film cameras that would allow older cameras to take digital photographs yet require no modification. Announced in late 1998, Silicon Film was to work just like a roll of 35mm film, with a 1.3 megapixel sensor behind the lens and a battery and storage unit fitting in the film holder in the camera. The product, which never materialized, became increasingly obsolete due to improvements in digital camera technology and affordability. The original concept for Silicon Film evaporated in 2001 when the parent company filed for bankruptcy. [4] A year later, a new Silicon Film product was announced that would replace the back of film cameras with a 10-megapixel sensor and LCD display; this product also has yet to materialize. [5] (note: however, the concept of a digital back for a film camera is viable, if only for high priced cameras with worthy optics. see for example Mamiya).
Lack of focus
By trying to do everything within a single product, the end result may be one that fails to do anything properly at all. By forgetting the initial purpose of a new software and trying to add more and more features, each individual feature gets less production resources invested.
An added risk to this approach is increased software instability, as rapidly growing software can generate increased amounts of unforseen bugs, glitches, security holes and other problems that can sometimes go unnoticed for weeks and months. These bugs may indeed never get fixed at all, the patches required to address the issues themselves becoming new vaporware items.
EA Games is famous[6] for their announcement of Vaporware Patches which never materialize, The 1.10 patch for Command and Conquer 3 is shaping up to be the newest installment in their chronicles of Vaporware, following such much needed but never released patches as those needed to fix Command & Conquer: The First Decade and Command & Conquer: Generals – Zero Hour.
Microsoft's Longhorn OS was first discussed in 2001 as a minor update to Windows XP, and intended to be released in 2004, but multiple successive delays and changes in strategy led some to call it "Longwait". Longhorn garnered third place in Wired's Vaporware Awards in 2004, and was placed 3rd in 2005. Wired quoted a reader as saying, "If Microsoft keeps on pushing back the dates for Longhorn and removing features from it, they might as well just promise to bundle Duke Nukem Forever with the OS."[7] The Longhorn project was eventually named Windows Vista. Microsoft released the OS to businesses at the end of November 2006, while releasing it to home users was delayed until January 30, 2007.
Vaporware Awards
In addition to historical examples, there are many products whose ultimate fate is unknown, and are considered vaporware.
One such example is the computer game Duke Nukem Forever, which has been in development for over ten years, announced shortly after the success of Duke Nukem 3D in 1996 and with an original projected release date of 1998. The game has since won Wired News's Vaporware Awards numerous times. It placed in second in 2000[8] and topped the list in 2001[9] and 2002.[10] Wired News created the Vaporware Lifetime Achievement Award exclusively for Forever and awarded it in 2003. George Broussard accepted the award, simply stating, "We're undeniably late and we know it."[11] It did not make the list in 2004, but Leander Kahney noted that they had received a lot of nominations for the game.[7] By popular demand, it topped the list again in 2005.[12] Currently, Duke Nukem Forever has been announced (once again) to be in full production, still however without a specified release date.[13] Wired once again awarded Duke Nukem Forever the first place in 2006 and 2007.
Also worth noting are the Indrema and Phantom video game consoles. The latter took Wired's top "award" in 2004, and second in 2005. It was finally dropped by its developer in August 2006.
Another classic example of vaporware is Turbo Pascal for the Amiga computer which was announced when Borland placed a full page advertisement in the Fall 1985 premier edition of AmigaWorld magazine. It never shipped and was quietly dropped a few years later. Though it never formally received an award, it was periodically mentioned over the decade that followed in various computer-related magazines due to the notoriety of Borland and the splash that the full page ad created for the then just-released Amiga 1000.
Redemptive software
On occasion, some software titles that were initially classified as "vaporware" redeem themselves after long waiting periods. Games that had an unusually long development period filled with delays and restarts include Half-Life[14], Half-Life 2 and Prey[15], which received chiefly positive reviews.
Another prime example of a redemptive vaporware could be Team Fortress 2 which, after a redesign from a more realistic character and level design to a more cartoonish character design reminiscent of Pixar movies, received glowing hands-on previews[16][17][18], and it was finally released on Oct.10, 2007 (playable since Sept.21 as an open beta for people who preordered "The Orange Box" pack).
See also
- Development Hell
- Glossyware
- List of cancelled video games
- List of vaporware
- List of commercial failures in computer and video gaming
- Shovelware
References
- ^ Dranove, David (2000). "The DVD vs. DIVX Standard War: Empirical Evidence of Vaporware". Competition Policy Center. Paper CPC01-016.
{{cite journal}}
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ignored (help) - ^ Fasoldt, Al (1988). "Why Tandy's recordable CD is a breakthrough even if it never makes it to the market". Retrieved 2006-03-06.
- ^ Mimic Systems' Spartan | Applefritter
- ^ Askey, Phil (2001). "Silicon Film - vaporized-ware". Retrieved 2008-02-20.
- ^ Askey, Phil (2002). "Silicon Film Strikes Back?". Retrieved 2008-02-20.
- ^ http://forums.ea.com/mboards/category.jspa?sls=2&categoryID=34
- ^ a b Kahney, Leander. "Vaporware Phantom Haunts Us All". January 7, 2005. Wired News.
- ^ Kahney, Leander. "Vaporware 2000: Missing Inaction". December 27, 2000. Wired News.
- ^ Manjoo, Farhad. "Vaporware 2001: Empty Promises". January 7, 2002. Wired News.
- ^ Kahney, Leander. "Vaporware 2002: Tech Up in Smoke?". January 3, 2003. Wired News
- ^ Vaporware Team Null. "Vaporware: Nuke 'Em if Ya Got 'Em". Wired News. January 20, 2004.
- ^ Kahney, Leander. "Vaporware: Better Late Than Never". Wired News. February 6, 2006.
- ^ "Duke Nukem Forever Dated". 2006. Retrieved 2006-03-06.
- ^ http://www.metacritic.com/games/platforms/pc/halflife?q=half-life Metacritic score 96
- ^ http://www.metacritic.com/games/platforms/pc/prey?q=prey Metacritic score 83
- ^ http://pc.ign.com/articles/780/780666p1.html IGN.com
- ^ http://pc.gamespy.com/pc/team-fortress-2/782564p1.html GameSpy.com
- ^ http://www.gameinformer.com/News/Story/200703/N07.0328.1722.34101.htm Game Informer
External links
- Wired Magazine Vaporware Awards
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- Other
- Community Memory postings on the term's origins crediting Ann Winblad and Stewart Alsop.