Fucking Unity.
Trying to add an iOS deployment license to my existing Pro account has eaten 2 hours of my day. Wait, no: 3 now. Their authoring tool has a button to add it, which launches store.unity.com with NO INSTRUCTIONS on it, nor even a mention of iOS or adding licenses or anything. Unity ID, manage seats, add licenses... NONE of it leads anywhere useful. I'm in the support queue now, and on Unity Answers, and even fucking tweeted about it, which got a defensive but useful response from a Unity coder last time I did it.
Anyway, I'm as mad as a junebug in July.
spoiler (click to show/hide)
It's sad that complaining on Twitter is the only way to get attention of companies sometimes. I bitched about some bug and had some Unity guy immediately asking me to submit a bug report and crash logs.
I can't go into details about one of my new projects of course. But while everything is absolutely legal, it's very morally grey at best in that it seeks to completely exploit the consumer base. There was a time when I was just out of college that I probably would've been so uncomfortable with the premise that I would've said no to doing it. But now? I've gotten so jaded by working with so many companies and watching them do so many morally reprehensible things that I'm just like "eh, this isn't even in the top 10 worst things I've helped companies do. If we don't do it someone else will and besides the tech is really cool. Not only will we do it, we're going to knock this out of the park!"
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At my last job we were making a heart rate app and as I was doing research on the APIs and similar products I started reading about Theranos and Fitbit and the rise health and fitness tech startups that were totally not qualified to be telling people things about their health. I remember looking at some competing company and seeing that they had a ton of doctor's and lawyers on their board while our calculations were based on some back of the envelope math I did after 10 minutes on google.
While the product wasn't really morally reprehensible the combination of the tech not being good enough to do with what they wanted and us not being suited to tell people anything from the data we were gathering didn't really sit well with me.
Its five months after the fact and the product hasn't come out so maybe they scrapped it. There was at least one similar app that beat it to market as well so maybe they just decided it wasn't worth the money, shrug.
As it is I don't really like the moral greyness of F2P games, so I'm not really sure I could ever do something any more sinister.