Yeah. It's that marketing team from Sirius Cybernetics Corp. which started ruling Sparx a long time ago. Ever since I see just feature creep and no bug fixing. When does this revolution come?
Wow, loved the link thank you! The first few opening sentences reflect the truth we have to face daily in EA. The statement "...not known for the
quality of their products, and almost all of their known inventions are
faulty..." is pertinent.
As for "Revolution"? Major external big-name reviewers such as Gartner and their "Magic Quadrant" provide us with an unbiased business-case assessment of vendors at play within a given market segment. I think the only reason (or opinion) EA survives to this day, is their relatively low cost to entry. Also, the general lack of a viable and cheap competitor with similar or better functionality, user experience and feedback system. I do wonder, as more customers use the product, and note it's awful and inconsistent user experience, surely they
must demand better software from EA?
In demanding better software from a vendor, customers help by logging bugs and features. Unfortunately, in EA's scenario, bugs are never fixed, and feature requests might as well not exist. The team seem to operate with arrogance as though separate from paying customers, such as you or me. No matter how deeply you provide insight into the nature of EA's software bugs (and potential resolution), the development team know better. And release-after-release, bugs remain and UX remains stagnant and difficult.
"Revolution" will come when customers reach the "point of no return" and decide that the effort made to support the product far outweighs the "rewards". Put financially, customers stop paying for a license to use a product that no longer serves
their modelling needs in the way
they require.