Huguette - thanks!
Zeldor - it's actually not that easy to pirate Pleco - we haven't even seen a cracked iPhone version yet, though we know it's coming - but it's probably true that serious language learners are more likely to be willing to pay up. Moving in the "learning platform" direction would certainly make an Android port easier to justify, since the work on that seems to be more on the content development / licensing side (which is very portable / non-platform-dependent) than on the programming side, but that might just mean we'd release a Pleco Reader for Android to present that product line to Android users without offering a corresponding higher-cost / lower-return dictionary.
I'm still not too worried about competition on Android - if it were easy to release a Pleco-like dictionary for Android we'd already be working on one ourselves

The iPhone market had considerably more time than Android has had to come up with a Pleco clone (without us to compete with - we weren't on iPhone at all until mid-December and didn't have a flashcard-enabled version until last week) and didn't, all it's produced to date is a succession of free / low-cost apps plus a couple of more expensive apps with licensed dictionaries but quality that's otherwise no better than the free ones.
And given that this is an either-or decision for us - invest resources into an Android version or into further development on iPhone - not supporting Android would let us further the competitive gap between us and a would-be Android competitor, and thus increase our odds of persuading people who aren't sure what smartphone to get to buy an iPhone (or an iPod Touch) so that they can run Pleco. Say for example that we have a certain amount of money which we can either invest in a) a Chinese handwriting recognizer for a new Android product or b) a
camera OCR system for our iPhone product (allowing people to take pictures of Chinese characters and look them up in the dictionary) - which of those is really a better use of our money? Is it better to have a great Chinese dictionary that works on Android, or a Chinese dictionary with a truly unique / special feature like that that works on
some platform? Which of those really does more for the cause of making it easier to learn Chinese?
Since I really don't want to offend people with these comments, I should say one other thing more explicitly. My posts here aren't so anti-Android because I really hate Android this much; I'm rather pragmatic about it, I just want to do what's best for Pleco and our customers. They're anti-Android because most of the people in this thread are pro-Android, and hence the best way to explore the merits / pitfalls of an Android version of Pleco is for me to take the opposing side. Which may get me into a little trouble if it makes people think that the official position of Pleco is that "Android Sucks!," but it does a lot more for actually getting Pleco on Android than a succession of messages about how much people really want an Android version
