| They had no choice? Really? Check out this archived post from when they took down their photo sharing site: https://web.archive.org/web/20180327235711/https://lytro.wuf... If they actually wanted to build a popular product with significant longevity, they could have done FAR more to enable people to build on their file format etc. This "they didn't want to pursue full vendor lock-in at every step of their company; they had no choice" apologism just doesn't stand up to any scrutiny. More likely, they made a bid to capture a greater share of the value, at the cost of limiting the size of their market, and it predictably failed. Or maybe they were prioritizing some kind of acquisition, over building a company with real longevity. I don't really know anything about the company besides a short skim through Google, but it just doesn't seem remotely plausible to me that they really truly wanted to make this accessible to more people and cultivate a larger market and ecosystem, but somehow had literally no choice in pursuing their vendor lock-in strategy. They chose to bet on control over mindshare, and this had predictable consequences. |
Also the device itself looked nice, but it was fairly hard to use and the view finder screen was a fairly bad lcd even at the time.
The fact that they weren’t giving away decoders at the time is pretty much a given, especially given how much emphasis they put on the “algorithms” they used.