I wrote to Scott Draeker and got this response from him. I'm thinking of mentioning his company in the CPA howto, with the caveat that I have no direct experience with them (similar to what I wrote about the TWIN library). What do you think--good idea or not? Scott Draeker wrote: > > >Scott, > > > > Can you tell me any commercial products that you've ported to Linux > >that are currently available? I'd like to mention your company in my > >howto and to send your name to the companies I'm in contact with, but I > >need to know more about you before I can in good conscience recommend > >you to them. Thanks. > > We're a new company, and hope to be announcing our first project sometime > next week. It's something everyone will hear about. > > Loki is coming into this market very early. We'll be the first to sell a > supported, top ten PC game in a retail box to the Linux crowd. If it > works, we think the floodgates will open. But someone has to take the > plunge. > > The idea behind an outside porting company is that a publisher can get > the port done without incurring any costs -- and that's a make or break > concern for most of them. One publisher I spoke with won't do ports > simply because it would take them 4 or 5 weeks to get the source in > shape, and they can make more money doing other things with that time. > > I think that many of the companies you speak with would be amenable to > our approach, even if they have no interest in Linux or porting their > products in general. In the meantime, as Loki ramps up for business, we'd > appreciate your simply mentioning that we exist, and that outsourcing is > an option. > > Best regards, > > Scott Draeker > President > Loki Entertainment Software -- Doug Loss It is impossible to imagine Goethe Data Network Coordinator or Beethoven being good at billiards Bloomsburg University or golf. dloss@bloomu.edu H. L. Mencken
-- BEGIN included message
- To: "Doug Loss" <dloss@csrlink.net>
- Subject: Re: Addition to commercial port advocacy howto
- From: Scott Draeker <draeker@thegrid.net>
- Date: Fri, 9 Oct 1998 09:11:05 -0700
>Scott, > > Can you tell me any commercial products that you've ported to Linux >that are currently available? I'd like to mention your company in my >howto and to send your name to the companies I'm in contact with, but I >need to know more about you before I can in good conscience recommend >you to them. Thanks. We're a new company, and hope to be announcing our first project sometime next week. It's something everyone will hear about. Loki is coming into this market very early. We'll be the first to sell a supported, top ten PC game in a retail box to the Linux crowd. If it works, we think the floodgates will open. But someone has to take the plunge. The idea behind an outside porting company is that a publisher can get the port done without incurring any costs -- and that's a make or break concern for most of them. One publisher I spoke with won't do ports simply because it would take them 4 or 5 weeks to get the source in shape, and they can make more money doing other things with that time. I think that many of the companies you speak with would be amenable to our approach, even if they have no interest in Linux or porting their products in general. In the meantime, as Loki ramps up for business, we'd appreciate your simply mentioning that we exist, and that outsourcing is an option. Best regards, Scott Draeker President Loki Entertainment Software
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