Well, then there's an easy way to figure that out.Mushy Mushy wrote:FFS. Maybe the contract stated they can answer support, but not state future direction.wasi wrote:That's obviously not the case because they're answering support emails, there's the twitter 'leaks'. Hell, there's the support page announcement even.
But whatever. Courtesy is not owed. You extend it or not. And if you sign an NDA that forbids you even minimal courtesy, that's your choice as well, you're free to do so. But there's also nothing wrong about being judged according those actions.
These two or three weeks are the brunt of the storm. There's no point on bearing this and then making a big explanatory statement in March. I think it's safe to assume this is all we'll ever hear, officially.
That's just what the weather in California tells me.
I WASN'T THERE, AND NOR WERE YOU.
I need you leave you armchair lawyers now and do some proper work
Send them a 2 question email.
Question 1: Some support related issue on the product.
Question 2: Question concerning the announcement.
If they answer 1 but not 2 then it's a clear NDA as it makes no sense to answer 1 and not answer 2. I'm not talking about them saying 'We can't answer 2" I'm talking about them ignoring the question altogether like it wasn't in the support request.
That would be the dead giveaway.
Why?
If there is no NDA and they don't answer, even if it's just to say it's personal and we choose not to discuss it, then they're simply being disrespectful to their customer base. If there is an NDA then their silence makes perfect sense and settles this matter once and for all.
So who wants to send in the 2 question support email?
