Channel Store blackout notice
The channel certification process shuts down every December in observance of the year-end holidays. Accordingly, we ask that developers note the following dates:Note also that channels will not be published or updated during the week of Thanksgiving (Friday, November 18th through Sunday, November 27th). Please plan appropriately.
- Friday, November 18th, 2016: Submission deadline for channels to be reviewed before the Channel Store blackout begins
- Thursday, December 15, 2016: Channel Store blackout date – No channels will be published or updated after this date
- Monday, January 9th, 2017: Channel certifications resume as usual
"EnTerr" wrote:
Anybody else think that's ridiculously snooty?
I mean, Apple and Amazon grant themselves only 1 week between Christmas and New Year.
RokuCo on the other hand? "Nah, we are good - we have made it, have nothing to compete for. Let's take a 6 week break, eh?"
"RobSMS" wrote:
That same day (October 27) I emailed Amazon regarding an issue I was having. I received a prompt reply 2 days later from their development support and they fixed my issue.
What the heck is the point of having "Developer Support" if you don't really plan on offering it? [...] And that doesn't even include the emails to advertising@roku or developer@roku that have never been answered.
Lately I've recommended against clients offering a Roku app because of these constant delays and lack of communication. It's not good business for me to say "Hey that project I'm working on for you is really late because I still don't have any answers from Roku developer support".
Lately I've recommended against clients offering a Roku app because of these constant delays and lack of communication. It's not good business for me to say "Hey that project I'm working on for you is really late because I still don't have any answers from Roku developer support".
That seems a tad severe. But yes, we should speak up so they can hear.
If RokuCo can laser-focus on improving the streaming platform (much narrower job than iOS and Android) - and wins developer hearts and minds through accessible and pro-active support (think Discover card live-human support vs bankes' automated support for Visa/Mastercard) - it can make itself the preferred first platform for publishers.
"RobSMS" wrote:
In my humble opinion, it should be the #1 platform already. My dollars per viewer are still higher than on other platforms, but those other platforms are catching up quickly. But it seems like RokuCo are losing their head-start by having this "hit and miss" developer support. If they could just get it up to par, they could maintain their lead... or at least that's my perspective.
I don't think it would take much, but they need to get someone in charge of developer relations. If there is someone like that, they either need more resources or they need their knuckles whacked for dropping the ball.
Just a simple response goes a long way to keeping us happy... but silence aggravates the situation...
"RobSMS" wrote:
I have exactly the same problem and it is still unresolved. Over two months have transpired and Roku Developer Support does not respond to emails. My submission on Oct 1, 2016 still sits in a state of "Your channel has been submitted for publishing and is being reviewed". The Developer Relations Manager does not even respond or attempt to offer resolution or an escalation path of any kind. The do not communicate rejection or cite issues with needed corrective action. The submission simply sits an a perpetual unpublished state. The emails to developer@roku.com get no reply with no update and no attempt to set expectations or clarify a problem. Why have a developer program at all? Does Roku even want SDK publishers or is this how they shift completely to a Direct Publishing only model. Does anyone have any advice or any insight as I've exhausted every avenue for support and I am wondering if anyone else is having this problem? Is anyone else experiencing this problem?