There's something on Full Tilt I really, really like. Right click on the player and you get an option "Put Me Here." This turns the table so I can put my seat where I want it to be, for instance, if I'm playing 2 tables, I can have one seat in the upper left corner of the screen and one on the lower right without overlapping to the point where I can't see when cards come. Over the last weekend, I went back to Empire for a turbo reload bonus and I really missed this feature. Party software sticks you in one spot and if you're in a middle seat, there is no way to effectively place multiple tables without severe overlap.
Hate Party's bonus button which opens a IE window. FT's bonus button opens a box. That works nicely.
I never got used to playing Prima's mini-view window. Didn't feel like I was sitting at a table and it often got me confused. Maybe if I'd played with it more, I'd have gotten used to it.
Minimalist tables are great. It's okay to have the fancy graphics for the fish and newbies, distracts them nicely, but for the rest of us, we can do without the avatars and stuff. (One, however, that was kinda neat for awhile was ordering food, drinks and cigars on Paradise.)
I still haven't found buttons and sliders that work as I'd like, and honestly not sure what I'd like. (Maybe one I could voice?) FT works pretty good. Click on the window and type the number, hit Enter, and it's there. Slick enough. NO bet the pot buttons, although the fish aren't all that good at betting and btp scares 'em.
Default mini-raise. Hate it. Don't know how to change it, but hate it.
Gotta show the amount in the pot, including bets, plus the rake. Full Tilt fails here, miserably. But they've got the best hand history in the business, including a playback feature. Neat.
Finally, a site software must improve on selecting tables. I basically want to see the same information on the table that GT+ provides, avg. Vp$iP and PFR% at a minimum. Avg. pot is pretty much a non-starter because who knows how many pots are taken for an avg. and the players % seeing the flop always seems hosed.
How's that?
CJ
"Are the players better as the stakes go up? It's not an exam; it's a buyin." Barry Tanenbaum