Yeah, unfortunately this is pretty much an unsolvable problem.
Roadmaps are subject to change and even more subject to be delayed, publishing them tends to disappoint more than reassure. If we gave a forward commitment the questions would just be "why not longer?" or "what happens in X + 1 years?".
All we can do is say what I'm saying now: we stand behind this product 100%, we think it solves real problems for developers, and we really hope people will try it out and find it useful.
I get the doubt, truly I do. But Google's incentives are clearly aligned with Cloud Firestore's success: if you folks use it and grow your app to be successful, we make money. If you use it and really like it, you're more likely to use Firebase and Cloud's other products, which will make us even more money.
>if you folks use it and grow your app to be successful, we make money. If you use it and really like it, you're more likely to use Firebase and Cloud's other products,
the issue is the inverse is also true: If you folks don't use it, we don't make money, and we deploy these resources elsewhere. See Parse
Roadmaps are subject to change and even more subject to be delayed, publishing them tends to disappoint more than reassure. If we gave a forward commitment the questions would just be "why not longer?" or "what happens in X + 1 years?".
All we can do is say what I'm saying now: we stand behind this product 100%, we think it solves real problems for developers, and we really hope people will try it out and find it useful.
I get the doubt, truly I do. But Google's incentives are clearly aligned with Cloud Firestore's success: if you folks use it and grow your app to be successful, we make money. If you use it and really like it, you're more likely to use Firebase and Cloud's other products, which will make us even more money.