JRiver is very focused on 'technical' things, you could say it is a 'technical' company, the product is very technical (and very good at it too) and largely sold to a technical audience. However, it's a bit lacking the 'soft' non-technical things; eg marketing, UI design, walk-throughs, recipes, user guides, how tos, tutorials, video guides.
The overview is 4 lines and a picture that doesn't really tell me anything. There are no examples or sufficient explanation of the various possibilities as the next section is how to configure it.
IMHO it should be more like this:
MC can be used a part of a 'Media Network'.....
A Media Network is.......
The type of supported devices are..... DLNA, ids, MC Clients, Android,
The ways to connect these type of devices is... Because... This it what it can do. .... This is what it can't do... This is what you need. .. . Here is an example of setting up a device .....
The ways to connect these type of devices is... Because... This it what it can do. .... This is what it can't do... This is what you need. .. . Here is an example of setting up a device .....
The ways to connect these type of devices is... Because... This it what it can do. .... This is what it can't do... This is what you need. .. . Here is an example of setting up a device .....
Overvierw of DLNA settings. .. This is what DLNA does. . . Why you'd use DLNA, explanation of the terms used in MC, these are what you'd need to configure to do. . .
Overview of Zones . ... What are they, what can they do, why would you use them, why would wouldn't you use them
Overview of the MC network. . . Clent, conversion settings and their impact.. . .
Etc
That's just me thinking aloud. . There are some Home Network examples but the first one relates to MC17, so that's 8 years old???
BLGentry is right, there's no way to get the complete picture or even a good recipe from what's there. A complex product is going to need suitable documentation to back it up, at the moment it's just not there.
Writing documentation is tough, but it's an excellent way of reviewing the processes in the product. If the documentation is too hard write/follow are the processes to as straightforward as they need to be.
MC is an excellent tool, it does many things, it does many of them very well, but getting that clear picture/overview/recipe of what it can do and how to does it is way more difficult than it should and sometimes impossible.
If there's one thing I'd recommend to evangelise about your product is invest in, let's say, two days of staff time to produce some walk through videos. Any format, long, short, overviews, deep dives whatever. It's far faster than writing Wiki pages. Just see the response, see what happens. You've seen my videos, laptop, headset, 2 VMs, free software, some notes to follow, done in 1 take sat on my bed. You don't need fancy equipment or a studio, just the ability to talk about something you understand (and I'm not even particularly good at that
)
You didn't get to where you are without taking risks in business, invest in a couple of days of staff time and see what happens. . .
Spike