Traditional manuals for software such as this are becoming rather rare. I'm sure the reason is only a small minority of users use them, and the cost of creating and maintaining a truly useful manual for software that is under continuous development is very high. And I don't think the fact JRiver can't afford the resources is the reason—I don't have manuals for Microsoft Office either.
Maybe it would help if wiki topics were better organized/referenced. It seems I always have difficulty finding what I'm looking for. And if I can't find something, I'm never sure whether it doesn't exist, or I just couldn't find it. That doesn't leave me in the mood for returning to wiki to add a topic after I've figured out how to do something.
I agree that creating a manual is no simple or inexpensive task. However to keep an on-line manual up to date is no big deal, as long as the manual is editable once it's been downloaded. When J River (in this case) makes a change that is worth noting they publish a clear addendum. They don't mess with the original, they just leave it up to the user to do what they will with the addendum, either add it into the original or keep it separate.
I disagree that manuals are rarely available these days. I haven't come across a paid for program that doesn't come with one, unless you're talking hard copy of course; that's another story. But on-line manuals, or on CD/DVD manuals are ubiquitous.
The problem is, the Wiki format truly stinks as a manual. For the reasons you mention, possibly inadvertently. Plus you can't browse, no big picture view, and you can't download unless bit by bit, for many hours is your idea of spending the day.
I decided to create the FAQ manual because I truly couldn't stand the Wiki. The manual is pretty good by the way. It's browseable and more readable than the Wiki, and it has an active index at the beginning and back to the top (index) buttons everywhere.
And, this is really cool, for those of you (if any) who have Kindles and possibly other ebooks. I'm just about done creating a Kindle version. This means, you'll be able to bookmark, notate, search, etc. and of course read the manual, while looking at or using MC.
By the way, if anyone can point me to topics that are complex enough and not just one time lookups that are not included on the FAQ page, please do, and I'll incorporate them into the manual too, eventually.
So, how hard can it be, to whip up a fairly decent manual from the info that's available? If I've been able to do what I have with no help in just a few days? If I were J River, I'd be giving me some help. Point me to all available/useful info and say "have at it," They wouldn't have to stand behind the manual (a user put this together use at your own risk kind of disclaimer), yet they might get something worthwhile. But, if anything, I feel a bit of resistance coming from....? Maybe it's something like "What's this new guy think he's doing anyway? Maybe after he's posted 748 times we'll consider what he...," Or maybe not.
Again, if anyone wants a copy of the original (see the post "FAQ manual now available" for details about contents) or the upcoming Kindle/ebook version (.amz or .prc) let me know. So far, I've sent out about 10 or 11 copies.