Monday 23 April 2007

Take a deep breath...

Passport - check.
US power adaptors - check.
Demo films - check.
Hotel reservations - err, David, you did get us somewhere to stay, didn't you?

So this is the moment of truth, where we get to find out what Moviestorm is really made of. In a few hours' time, I'm flying out to LA and New York with David B on the first leg of the Moviestorm World Tour 2007 to demo in front of our harshest critics - our users. It's been a long, hard road to get here over the last two years, but, man, it's been a great ride so far! In the spring of 2005, we were just two guys, in our spare rooms, with a mad idea. By spring 2006, we had a full-time artist, a couple of part-time staff, and a modest R&D budget. And now, we've got offices, a dozen full-time staff, freelancers, and hundreds of beta testers (sign up right here, folks) and we're on the verge of having a real, honest-to-goodness, mostly working, movie-making tool. And in the next week, we find out whether we're on the right track, or whether we've got to go back to the drawing board and do it all again.

The toughest decision we had to make (apart, obviously, from who got the one comfy office chair) was to bring on our beta testers at such an early stage. It was nerve-wracking letting people use it before it was anywhere near ready, but that's been critical to the development of Moviestorm. For the last six months, we've had users telling us, every single day, what they want out of a movie-making tool, and they've been involved in shaping Moviestorm right from the beginning. Yes, we've come in for a fair amount of "tough love", but it's been worth it. It's meant that we can be pretty damn sure that we're not just making Moviestorm into the tool that we want to see - it will cater for all sorts of users, and for all sorts of films.

Still, I can't keep hiding behind the safety of the Internet any longer. We've been hunkered down in our little bunker for ages, nurturing our little creation, and now it's time to come out of stealth mode and play. In a couple of days, we face the big wide world in person, and find out what they really think. Brickbats or Bollinger - the audience will decide!

I'm rather looking forward to it, I think ...

3 comments:

Thrash said...

Too bad you missed out on the Adelaide Fringe (Australia), you would have had a huge interested audeience there.
To summarise, the fringe is dedicated to Music, plays, comedy, and every art form possible.

Thrash said...

*If you had came here on the world tour :P

Matt Kelland said...

Adelaide, eh? I wouldn't mind another trip to Oz! That's one more for the diary.