Possibly the developers first Apple-based application?
The interface is quite strange and not following the typical UI themes or the design quality associated with most apps even in the top 50 of this category. The developer has instead opted for a solid black background, large roundrect buttons and hiding pages of descriptive text behind "(i)" information bubbles rather than designing an interface to accommodate the information. Status areas in the Model Release Summary allow you to press them, they stay in their active appearance but do nothing (if a /button/ reads: signature required, pressing that button should take me to the entry screen. If it has no action, dont make it a button).
When you first open the app youre given a screen you have no choice but to accept, letting you know that the releases it produces are not legal documents, which while needless to say also produces a terrible first-use experience. Despite paying for the application the company decides to put its logo, website url and program name on all your releases.
The application does as it says, but through close to a dozen screen-fuls per release created, and while feeling like paper releases are actually the faster method to go back to using. It "works" in that it produces a release (whether agencies even accept the releases is a wholly different matter that the developer claims theyre working on) but Im giving it the solid two star for "dont like it."
I really hope they work on making this the great app it can become! Id love to re-rate this as a 5, or to feel like $10 in photocopied releases wouldnt be the better long-term purchase.
Doug Stewart about
Easy Release - Model Releases