mettelus
I didn't read through this all, but the "rewards" idea could be made even simpler and useful IMO (only caught a few comments on this before typing this post).
Example... someone who puts 40+ hours a week behind the wheel of SONAR should get higher precedence in both bug reporting and feature requests over those who have used SONAR for 15 minutes combined in the past 3 months. This does not imply that they "go to the head of the line" and trump everyone else outright, but that their opinions and votes count for "more value" (2:1, 5:1, whatever...) Even a simple "hours logged" multiplier (with fudge factor to keep numbers reasonable) would be a wiser metric for sorting inputs/feedback (plus CW can specifically focus surveys to different groups to bucket "legacy woes" versus "new user hurdles" and such).
In this regard, it could highly sway (for the better) the "squeaky wheel gets the oil" syndrome that occurs often in here.
Hmm.
I easily go way over 40 hours in any given week, and I reckon I disagree.Weighting data is always tricky, because it means adding presumptions to what the data means.
And the tricky thing here is, the number of hours put in won't always mean broad usage.
For example, up until a new project starting a week or so ago, all I'd done for several months was mix audio. Easily working 70 hours a week, for weeks on end. But in that time, not a single plug in instrument used, no MIDI features used, no step sequencer, no matrix, no staff view... huge areas of the program going untouched.
So the last six months of data from me would say MIX FEATURES ARE SUPER SUPER IMPORTANT AND MIDI IS NOT.
Except now I'm stuck into a project that requires lots of synth programming, sequencing, virtual instruments all over the place, loop construction, you name it. So that 70 hours a week of data from before doesn't even represent
me, and it's going to take me six months to amass enough data for this other pattern of use that does.