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Comments
I'll rate this thread at a solid ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The original discussion is really valuable. Take a minute to review your faves.
It helps.
But there's a lot of pointless remarks that I wasted my time sifting thru. Definitely room for improvement. Stop the personal kerfuffles and I'll up my review to ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
;-)
Ok I am not here to reignite anything but I do have a related question that I think some of you would also like answered.
@Sebastion Does this Audiobus forum share our email address with app developers? I receive a few unsolicited emails from developer who I have never provided any details to. It is not a big deal for me personally but I would still like to know if you share your email list and if so why? Please understand that this is not an accusation as I can think of a couple of other candidates who could be providing lists of music app users.
Do music app reviews fall into the category most of the time of fake reviews, bought reviews, unhelpful reviews, mass spam reviews?
Unlike Amazon, where I am free to review anything I please, one has to purchase the app to leave a review in the app store right?
are people really paying 20 bucks for a synth, or 10, 50 for auria, or cubase, that aren't being honest, for the most part in their review? I've read loads of reviews on the app store, sometimes for shear entertainment. Music apps tend to have better reviews, than the leading game apps. At least for the most part. There are always the exceptions, and crazy out there reviews.
bottom line for myself, several developers have chimed in and said it really does help. No matter how biased, broken, half assed backward the whole system is, I will do better at leaving reviews for them.
I like to give some apps reviews...
But, in my iPad there´s only reviews from the Swedish AppStore that reader in Sweden will see...
That´s a pity...
That´s why I have an Apple US-account that I´m logging into sometimes to read reviews in USA...
It would be very nice if the Developers where allowed to respond to ours reviews in Appstore also!
Why Apple do you not allow comments from Developers in the review section?
Another good idea would be a button in Appstore there we could give Developers some extra money!
Interesting write up on customer ratings. Research is from amazon, flipkart and snapdeal but I'm guessing the patterns are similar on the app store. https://medium.com/ux-for-india/online-shopping-insights-from-customer-ratings-in-flipkart-amazon-and-snapdeal-6bd75f1cf8f
And, I think, a great post for devs on how best to get good reviews: https://medium.com/circa/the-right-way-to-ask-users-to-review-your-app-9a32fd604fca The final solution for their app wouldn't work with most music apps but plenty of interesting take-aways.
That’s odd, in the second link, that a 3.5 rating means the person is hesitant. This just goes to show how the star rating is arbitrary. If I’m satisfied with a thing, I’d give it three stars. If someone made me a cup of tea and shortly after I drank it asked how it was, I might shrug and say “it was okay, thanks’’, meaning there’s nothing wrong with it, it was just a cup of tea, same as it should be. That‘d be me giving it three stars, it’s fine, acceptable, does the job. If someone gave me a cup of tea and it propelled me into a mind-expanding experience, totally unlike a normal cup of tea, I might have to give that four stars, but that’s above normal. If the cup of tea also somehow involved supplying sex, intense pleasure and maximum gratification (i.e., Big Lebowski dream sequence), well, that’s not your normal cup of tea. I think wheeling out all five stars would be justified, but that’s quite quite exceptional I’m sure we’ll all agree. And yet, people give five stars for the normal nothing special about it nothing incorrect with it cup of tea. They’re clipping their dynamic range and then applying a non-linear transfer curve - brick-wall compression. Three stars to me suggests “does the job”, no complaints. If sections of the population think that five stars mean that, and other sections of the population think that three stars is the central baseline for that, what’s the point of even paying attention to stars if nobody can even use them correctly without saturating each time?
I agree and I think that applies to music, film, and book reviews by critics too. The star/numerical rating system is BS everywhere. It's important to read the actual review. Some critics like the New York Times don't have ratings next to their reviews.
I almost never rate apps, but if I do it'll be five stars for something amazing, or for a developer that gives good support, or a protest lower rating for an app that isn't working, bad support, or has been abandoned. I don't really see the point in reviewing or rating an app that just does what it's supposed to - I bought it, it works, done. Why should I award an app stars just for working properly?
When I buy an app I read the higher and lower reviews, the mass of generic back slapping just gets in the way.
The other thing to consider is, that, when I worked on magazines (e.g., ST World Magazine — an Atari ST mag here in the UK) we realised that readers who write in with suggestions, criticism or praise, can basically be ignored. They’re not representative of most readers. Normal readers of a mag don’t write in to the mag. Those that do are basically weirdos.
At COMPUTE! Magazine we kept a file of the weirdest letters. Some amazing things. Had one guy who managed to find all sorts of hidden demonic symbols in advertisements.
Yep, it's all busted. If I'm satisfied with a thing I give it 5 stars which, admittedly, leaves no room to express via stars when I've been blown away. It's similar to tipping for me; if I'm satisfied it's 20%. Difference with tipping is if I'm blown away, I can go up. Yep, it's all busted.
I don't think much of the app review system. Something has always gone wrong when I've tried to review an app on my ipad and I alway end up giving up.
On the other hand I give my support for apps I believe in on this site ... and this is where many iOS musicians hang so I think that is more than enough. After all I paid for those apps not the other way around.
I'm really really curious about Appstore and the toplist over most selling app in different categorys...
I living in Sweden. Is the toplist under Music-apps only sells in Sweden, or?
Sometimes it's really strange, when apps that has'nt been updated for years is on the top three best selling apps in Music category?
And, apps that I know is popular is not even among the 150-toplist....?
Can we trust Apple here?
I'm confused...
For me a good rating/review of an app that I like, is my help to the devs to increase the sells...
Dude yer nutz, its either a two or a four
Reviewing apps in the AppStore can be like quantifying the amount of water in an ocean, they can change immensely from an initial release and sometimes usually a far worse scenario never get updated at all, reviews like apps should be updated, even if the app doesn't get updated - but really the best proof of the pudding is....so I'd say a demo - freebie etc. is the best way for developers to promote their hard work. That and get the STR to demo it.
Yeah AppStore top charts are quarantined by not only country but also device. So if you buy an app in Sweden it wont affect the charts in any other country. Likewise if you buy an app on your iPad it wont affect the iPhone top charts.
For smaller countries with not a huge volume of downloads its not that hard to climb the top charts. For instance in Australia I only need a few downloads a day to hit the top 50. With that little amount of downloads needed its easy to see why apps that get into the top charts tend to stay there as the enormous amount of exposure they get by being in the top charts helps them keep the few downloads a day they need to stay there.