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Hijack y nicecast
Hijack y nicecast






hijack y nicecast
  1. #Hijack y nicecast pro#
  2. #Hijack y nicecast software#
  3. #Hijack y nicecast series#
  4. #Hijack y nicecast mac#

#Hijack y nicecast software#

Rogue Amoeba Software, LLC is a privately held software company based minutes outside of Princeton, New Jersey.

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Rogue Amoeba creates powerful, innovative tools and has a good time doing it. Rogue Amoeba's founders carry a tradition of superb Macintosh products, with a focus on audio.

#Hijack y nicecast series#

Rogue Amoeba's product line includes the wildly popular Audio Hijack series for audio recording as well as the audio broadcasting tool Nicecast.įor more information on Rogue Amoeba Software, please visitĪirPort, AirPort Express are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.

  • Flying Meat’s VoodooPad Lite is kicking our butts.And are used for informational purposes only.
  • Brian has rapidly answered my challenge.
  • But never let it be said that Rogue Amoeba was timid, dear readers! If the average turns out to be 25% and our rate looks pathetic by comparison, I’ll certainly look a fool. Hopefully this won’t prove foolish on my part. If others get on board, we’ll see some posts showing the conversion rates for other applications.

    #Hijack y nicecast mac#

    So what say you Mac software developers? How about a meme across the Mac blogosphere? (Whee, buzzwords!) Brian Wilson of Unsanity, inspiration for this follow-up, I’m looking in your direction. However, I’m hoping this article might inspire others to share information on their conversion rates (particularly during non-release times). I’m always curious as well, but Rogue Amoeba keeps mum about our own numbers and I certainly understand when others do the same.

    hijack y nicecast

    I was speaking with Cabel of Panic the other day (about t-shirts, of course), and he was bemoaning the fact that no one in the Mac world shares sales data. It looks like Windows is much friendlier to ISVs than we all think, but I doubt it outright beats the Mac platform. Nicecast is by far our poorest performer, probably due to its higher price tag.įinally, given these numbers, I think it’s safe to assume that Winfoil’s conversion rate is artifically high due to its recent release.

    #Hijack y nicecast pro#

    We also see that among our Mac products, Macfoil actually has our highest conversion rate, with Audio Hijack Pro just behind it. It’s clear that in downloads and raw sales, our products rank in order of popularity as: Audio Hijack Pro, Airfoil, Audio Hijack, Nicecast. Without that, it’s really just numbers and without similar data from other companies, we can only compare among our own applications. This is all pretty rough, and unfortunately we’re not in a lab where we can perform controlled experiments. Yes folks, for the second day in row, it’s a table not incorrectly used for layout.Ĭonversion Rates Across All Applications, May 12th – May 31st 2006 We can’t yet compare the Windows version in a period of downtime, but I did dig up the relevant numbers on our other applications over the timeframe used yesterday. As Quentin noted in the yesterday’s comments, releases are the exception. We think the most interesting and valid comparison is the conversion rate during a period of relative downtime. This would also provide interesting data, but unfortunately, we don’t have the traffic numbers for Airfoil Mac’s release (March of 2005). Readers had some comments about the specific comparison we made, noting that perhaps we should have measured the first 20 days of the Windows version against the first 20 days of the Mac version. Part of that article included a comparison of the conversion rates (from downloads to sales) between the Mac and Windows versions of Airfoil.Īs noted, these numbers were not what we’d expected. Yesterday, I posted an article detailing some lessons we’ve learned in our short time as the developers on the Windows platform.








    Hijack y nicecast