Beta Bologna
November 27th, 2006by Jon Thornton, Tech Whiz
Nowadays it’s rare to find a web site that launches without a beta tag. “Beta” has become a badge that implies, “We’re not your grandfather’s boring old internet! We’re Web 2.0!”. Dion Almaer sums up my thoughts perfectly in his post on Beta: The Web 2.0 Neverending Clearance Sale.
Originally, “beta release” meant a feature-complete version of software that was given to a limited number of people for the purpose of finding bugs. Once the bugs were fixed, the software became version 1.0 and lost the beta tag.
Microsoft started the trend of widely-released betas when they offered pre-release versions of Windows XP and Office. Reviewers would say, “the software is buggy, but it’s beta so we can’t hold that against them”. Beta became a way to shield yourself from criticism.
While Microsoft started the trend, I think Google is to blame for the rampant misuse we see in web startups today. GMail has been in beta for 2 years now. Google News was in beta for 4 years. The word loses all meaning when used in this way. Flickr has thankfully moved out of beta over a year after they were acquired by Yahoo, but now their website says Flickr is “gamma”. Flickr launched almost 3 years ago; enough with the Greek letters!
If you’ve been reading this thinking “hypocrite! ParkWhiz has a beta tag too!”, you’re absolutely right. For now.
The parking search tool available right now at ParkWhiz.com is only a subset of what ParkWhiz will be. Aashish and I thought long and hard about how we could convey this to people when they visit ParkWhiz’s homepage. We concluded that a beta tag would be best since people have grown accustomed to seeing it around the internet. When the ParkWhiz Marketplace launches, you have my personal guarantee that the word “beta” (hell, all Greek letters) will be banished from our website.
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