Offload

A Hallway of Doors

More Features, More Problems

With both Offload and Slugline, I’ve had the opportunity to practice a theory about software User Experience. I call it the “hallway of doors,” and it’s a way of visualizing the tax levied on users by seemingly beneficial features and functionality.

My favorite apps are the ones that do one thing, and do it well. The user experience of these single-purpose apps can be imagined as a hallway that the user travels down. There’s one way in (launching the app), and one way out (exporting a PDF of your screenplay in Slugline, successfully importing your camera media in Offload).

BulletProof had the exact same checksummed import and backup features as Offload. But it also had many other features. That’s good, right? Who doesn’t love features? You could color correct your footage, and add tags and other metadata. You could transcode to a variety of formats.

Here’s what that looks like:

It’s easy to argue that features are purely good. One might take the stance that they don’t get in the way unless the user needs them, and then they are welcome. But look at that hallway. None of those new doors are “in your way.” Yet most people will find themselves curious about what’s behind them. And what’s behind each door varies greatly. Preferences is a door with a few buttons, but Color Correction is a door to a ton of control and power. Playback is barely a closet. Transcoding is actually another exit.

Is there stuff beyond these doors you should be using? Or is it safe to ignore them? If you open Color Correction first, you might think that every door has a big, powerful room behind it. If you open Playback first, you might think each door is just a pantry.

It’s hard for us developers to realize that people are terrified of using our apps wrong.

When you start adding doors, you add distractions, yes — but worse, you create a sense of unease in the user. Your app is now a Skinner Box; the doors offering unpredictable rewards. Every door is something new to learn. Every door is an opportunity to use the app wrong.

If the user has any other way to get their work done — even a terrible one, they will respond to this feeling by not using the app. This is what happened with BulletProof. People didn’t use it because we gave them too many chances to use it wrong.

Too many doors.

Photoshop is All Doors

Think of your friend who is really good at Photoshop. The one who uses it every day for work. The expert. Call them up and ask them how to do something simple, like mask one layer with another’s luminance. I guarantee you they’ll say something like: “Well, I know there are better ways, but this is how I do it...”

“I know there are better ways of doing it” really means “I haven’t opened all the doors, so I’m sure I’m using Photoshop wrong.”

Eliminating Doors Means Saying No

I listen to a lot of podcasts. I’ve tried a few third-party podcast apps for iOS, but always came back to the buggy and annoying Apple Podcasts app. When Marco Arment, creator of Instapaper and The Magazine, released Overcast, it took me less than a day to switch over to it for 100% of my podcast listening.

The other podcast apps seemed to compete with Apple's free offering by adding more features. Overcast won me as a paid user with a couple of well-chosen features, but mostly with its minimal doors.

Marco hosts his own podcast called ATP, and has appeared on a few others discussing the development of the app. He’s been candid about design decisions both in these interviews and on Twitter. Maybe my favorite of his tweets on the subject was this one (since deleted):

I made Overcast because I had a different opinion on how, why, and where to say “No.” I’ll always need to be careful not to ruin that.
— Marco Arment (@marcoarment) July 28, 2014

When people make totally reasonable feature requests of my tools, I’m always carefully weighing the potential benefits of the feature with the inevitable tax of adding a new door. This is a particularly important thing to consider when your app is popular largely because it’s a simple and elegant alternative to a feature-rich incumbent.

How do Apps Wind up Cluttered with Doors?

One reasonable feature request at a time.

I know it’s hard to believe, but if I ever say “no” to your feature request, it’s often because I’m trying to protect the hallway experience.

The obvious counterpoint to this is that there's always room for improvement in any app:

With Magic Bullet Looks 3.0, for example, we added many new features. But we held back on some because we weren't sure if they were worth the tax of another door. We also removed some doors, by eliminating little-used features.

Power And Simplicity

A simple tool that does a simple thing isn’t impressive, and neither is a feature-rich tool that’s difficult to use. But show me something minimal that enables a ton of creative power, and I get excited. The challenge of making something powerful enough for you to do your most important work, but door-free enough for you to enjoy the experience, is something I look forward to every day.

BulletProof Discontinued

Two years ago, Red Giant released BulletProof, a media management tool for video shooters. Today, they announced that it is being discontinued. Because I stood up in front of a thousand people at NAB two years ago — and all of the readers of Prolost — and pitched the vision of this app as “the other half of your camera,” I feel I owe you an explanation of what happened.

BulletProof was not a successful product, for two important reasons:

You didn’t buy it.

BulletProof didn’t sell well. It never made enough money to cover its substantial development costs. That could have been okay, because we could have worked on that like Microsoft does, where it’s often the third version of a product that actually lives up to both the usefulness and profitability potential of an announcement — but there was a bigger problem:

I didn’t use it.

It is 100% true that BulletProof was designed by filmmakers, for filmmakers, to fill a real need. But despite this, I personally never made it a day-in, day-out necessity in my own workflow the way I do with Magic Bullet Suite.

BulletProof failed what has always been my number one rule for designing products at Red Giant: Will I actually use it? I’ve given a lot of thought as to why that is, and I have a few ideas. If you’re interested, read on.

It’s hard to sell good habits.

Bruce Sharpe, the creator of PluralEyes, pointed out an important difference between his audio sync product and BulletProof. Bulletproof is a vitamin, where PluralEyes is a pain reliever. It’s hard to get people to take their vitamins, but sooner or later, everyone needs a painkiller.

Every shooter already has some solution for getting files off their cameras. BulletProof needed to be better than what they were already using. We thought better meant tons and tons of awesome functionality, like playback, playlists, in/out points, keywords, and color correction. But it turned out that...

Simple is better than better.

We should have seen this day coming when we noticed two years ago that the most common reaction to BulletProof was “Wow, that looks amazing — I should really take the time to learn that.”

BulletProof was impressive, but to many it felt like an obligation. Often people would react to it by saying “I know a lot of people who would love this,” which is a very different thing than saying “I love this.”

One of the best byproducts of the grand BulletProof experiment is Offload, a stripped-down, bare bones tool for getting video and stills off your camera and onto your computer. My design goal with Offload was simple: I wanted you to feel like you already knew how to use it. And customers overwhelmingly voted (with dollars) in favor of an app that does less, but does it right now, without imposing a steep learning curve.

BulletProof is better than manually copying files in the OS, but much harder. Offload is better (because it’s safer), and easier.

A camera-facing software product is always out of date.

How many times does OS X bug you about system updates that are nothing but format support for new cameras? How many Lightroom or Photoshop updates do we go through for this reason? Heck, Adobe released a Camera Raw compatibility update just a few weeks before launching Lightroom CC — that’s how urgent and frequent these updates are. Red Giant is a small company, and keeping BulletProof up-to-date with all the latest cameras and codecs was always going to be an uphill battle.

An app that does everything pretty well is not as appealing as one that does one thing better than anything else.

What exactly was BulletProof? Was it a transcoding tool? An on-set preview and color tool? A tool for DITs, or for shooters, or for editors? Was it for managing libraries of b-roll or for making a director’s life easier on set?

Unfortunately, the answer was 80% yes to all those questions.

We knew this was a problem. No one could ever describe BulletProof in a single sentence. Yet we plowed forward, thinking this lack of specific functional intent was a problem we could solve in the future, rather than a fundamental failing.

What now?

There are two very important things to know about BulletProof’s end-of-life. First, Red Giant is 100% committed to making every single BulletProof and Shooter Suite customer happy. They will contact you individually and make every effort to offset the damage done by discontinuing a product you paid good money for, and may have even come to rely on.

The second thing to note is that BulletProof represents a major technological investment at Red Giant, and that investment has paid dividends in numerous ways. BulletProof ushered in an entirely new interface technology at Red Giant. It provided our first opportunity to build a playback engine compatible with Colorista and Looks. The benefits of these projects will be felt across the entire product line. And of course, BulletProof’s checksum-verified copy and backup technology lives on in Offload.

I believed in the vision of BulletProof, and in many ways I still do. It’s a bummer that this is where we are. But I applaud the team at Red Giant for making the difficult decision to move past this ambitious experiment and focus their resources on the products that have truly connected with filmmakers.

Introducing Offload

When Red Giant introduced BulletProof, we sought to solve a great number of problems with gathering, organizing, and managing the huge quantity of media we create with our cameras. Some people swear by it, but it's a lot of app.

Everyone needs a trusted system for copying footage from their camera cards to their computer. For most shooters I know (video and stills), that's still a manual, drag-and-drop process. It's fussy and error-prone, and there's no way to be sure your files are free from corruptions or errors. Want a backup? Manually initiate another copy.

Today, Red Giant launches Offload. It's a simple, powerful app for getting your shots off your camera and onto your computer.

Speed

Offload is fast, at both copying and verification.

Safety

Offload uses the field-proven checksum-verified copy technology from BulletProof. Each file is tested to be identical to the camera original, and Offload shows you this process in an intuitive, graphical way.

Configurable

We realize you've been doing this without our help for a while now, so Offload allows you to easily set up folder naming templates using dates, camera info, and custom text. Keep your same workflow—but let Offload automate it for you.

Director-Proof

Offload is easy. There's nothing to learn. It has one screen, no options, and no catalog file to manage. You already know how to use it.

Visible From Space

You're on a shoot with a hundred things on your mind. You return to your laptop and try to remember if the card sticking out of it has been copied and backed up, or just copied, or hasn't been copied yet. Just me?

Offload's interface is big, colorful, and communicative. Gold means something's happening. Blue means done and safe. Red means bad. You'll know your copy progress at a glance, even from across a busy set.

Backup

Offload makes it easy to add a second, backup copy destination. The copy finishes first, and you can remove your media card right away. The backup will continue in the background, using the same checksum-verified technology.

Works Your Way

Offload plays nice with your exitsting workflow, instead of trying to replace it. It's just a better way to copy files. For example, if you double-click a thumbnail, Offload takes you right to the media file.

Offload is simple, powerful, and affordable. It doesn't ask you to change how you work. It makes the process of transferring media visual, easy, and fast. Its checksummed copy technology could save your butt. It's available today from Red Giant for only $49, or as a part of the Shooter Suite, which also includes PluralEyes and BulletProof.