hrothgar, on May 13 2007, 09:11 AM, said:
A close friend of mine owns a company that produces and publishes games for small form factor devices like cell phones and PDAs. We (briefly) considered doing a port of of the BBO client. However, we abandoned this as a bad idea. From our perspective, there's a number of significant problems with the idea:
1. I don't believe that the usage patterns for cell phone games is a good match for BBO. People normally play a game on a cell phone for 2-3 minutes while they're killing time waiting for a bus. This really doesn't match well for a game like bridge where you'll (hopefully) play a number of boards with the same partner.
2. There isn't enough screen real estate on a Treo to support the BBO client. Messaging is also a pain in the butt. Do you really expect my grandmother to understand 13375p34k
3. The demographics aren't a good fit. There are LOTs of cell phones in the world. There's a decent number of bridge players. The number of bridge players who play games (ANY games) on devices like cell phones is very small. Most bridge players are old. Most cell phone games are young. And nary the twain shall meet.
We did give serious consideration to porting "Bridge Master" over to portable devices. The usage pattern seemed like a better fit and the client was a lot simpler. We decided to go with a Counting trainer for Blackjack instead.
With respect to #1:
I tend to agree although there's a good deal of pretty short sessions going on in BBO as it is, I think. Also, online play isn't even the strongest application here. What is much more appropriate for handhelds (and what I'd give my right arm for) is the ability to do things like kibitz, follow live lessons, watch live vugraphs and archives, access online content, use the rich library of free (LTPB for ex.) and for-fee offline content with a handheld application that is a Palm version of the Bridgebase display engine, etc.
With respect to #2:
Oh, I don't know, it's amazing what a little creativity can do. Have you seen the latest Omar Sharif Bridge for the Palm? The display and UI is really quite adequate, almost elegant. As for your grandmother, I'm sure she is a nice lady (don't forget to wish her a great mother's day!) but she is NOT the future of the game.
With respect to #3:
I get your point. However, I must say that as long as the bridge community shares a general view that there's no room for technology or innovation because the old bridge players will never use it, the game will continue to decline.