Archive for December, 2005

Save the Comics Industry, Go Digital!

// December 12th, 2005 // 13 Comments » // My Stuff

Provided By Flickr User: fluzoThe comic book industry has been hurting for a lot of years. This is no surprise to anyone who has remotely followed comics at all over the last 10 years. Comic book shops continue to close. I think the closest one to me is now over 100 miles away.

Is this because people aren’t interested in superheroes?

I’d say a definitive no to that one. Just look at what’s been coming out of Hollywood in the last 5 years: Spider-Man (1 & 2), X-Men (1, 2 & 3), Daredevil, Sin City, Electra, Blade (1, 2, and 3), the Hulk, Batman Begins, The Fantastic Four, Superman Returns, and more! I’d be willing to guess the total revenue on these movies far exceeds how much the printed material is pulling in. Not to mention cartoon series and video games…

Is this because we read less?

I’m not sure where national or international reading numbers sit, but if anything we are reading differently. Blogs and web news as well as online published magazine’s are unlikely to be tracked, but all seem to be doing well.

So here’s my theory of how to fix comics.

Distribute online. Satisfy the long tail and distribute your comics just like Apple iTunes music store. Right now tons of comics are being illegally distributed online through BitTorrent. Just go to isohunt.com and search for any superhero you can think of). This shows a clear desire by the community to get their comics in this format.

Here’s how I would suggest making it a success:

– Take a chance and distribute your comics in CBR/CBZ format with no DRM. If you put DRM on it, people will break it. Those who want to steal comics will. Don’t invest the time and resources to put some crappy rights management that’ll inevitably be broken immediately upon release. So don’t bother, it’ll just slow you down and likely produce bad press. Think about the good press of being the first industry to trust your clients.

Do not provide comics in a Flash format that is cumbersome to read. CBR.cc currently has an indie comic called “Six Gun” that they provide as Flash. This is cumbersome to read and I’d guess most wouldn’t bother. I want to click one button and have it flip the page. Simple. Marvel also used to do this with their various Ultimates titles, providing s few issues as Flash based digital comics. I forced my way through one, loved the story but hated the experience.

– Provide comics at a great price point digitally, I’d suggest $0.99. I’d happily grab up of comics that I don’t want to preserve long term at that price.

– Release less printed copies, so there is a reason to collect and save. Collectors want to feel like what they have is valuable. Fewer actual printed copies would make this true again.

– Provide online previews of the first 4 pages of every comic.

– Try some new ideas out in a cheap digital only format.

– Allow me to one click subscribe to a printed version. Once a reader gets hooked on the digital version, it’s likely they’ll want to go further, or collect the printed ones.

– Do fantastic cross title promotion. For example if I buy mostly Spider-Man, and he is making a guest appearance in X-Men, tell me about it when I login to my account. Or, if I buy New Avengers and you introduce The Sentry, tell me about the back issue Sentry mini series you have so I can get back info on the character. Or if I love everything Brian Michael Bendis ever wrote, tell me when he decides to write a 4 part Spider-Woman mini-series. Amazon has become famous for this, follow their lead here.

– Finally, provide your entire back issue library easily accessible. Some of these books have histories that extend back into the 60’s. How am I supposed to remember something that happened to a hero before I was born in a book that I can only read if I find an old copy on eBay? Of course I can read about it on a fan site, but how does the industry profit from this and continue to produce great titles?

OK, that’s my rant. Hopefully the industry smartens up and adopts this fantastic new medium to expand to the potential we all know it has. Put it this way, make comics easy enough to get digitally, that it would be ridiculous not to.

bittorrent, cbr, cbz, comic book industry, comic books, comics, digital publishing, DRM, ecommerce, long tail, marvel

Use Blingo, Not Google

// December 12th, 2005 // 3 Comments » // Technology Bits

BlingoI’m a big Google search fan. Consistently they have always provided me great results and they are fast. So why should I try to convince anyone to switch away from Google and use Blingo?

Frankly, it’s because their the same thing, except Blingo has the added benefit of awarding prizes at random to people who use it to search. What’s better, their search engine is powered by Google.

This means you lose nothing, but stand to gain all kinds of things. In addition, sign up through my link and we are forever hooked as friends. This means whatever either of us wins we both win it.

Sounds a lot like a scam, but here’s the thing, Blingo makes a pile of money off adsense advertising and they share a bit of that with us, their users. Simple concept, great execution.

Anyway, go signup, it couldn’t hurt…

blingo, search, search engine, google, adsense

Ultimate Fantastic Four

// December 11th, 2005 // 4 Comments » // My Stuff

I’ve never been a fan of the Fantastic Four. At all. They sort of go against everything I love about Marvel. They have life easy, their beloved by the community, and have unlimited funds. This is very different than Spider-Man who is trying to hold his life together while being hated for his altruism.

Anyway, I decided to get my hands on Ultimate Fantastic Four purely to find out if Brian Michael Bendis had put the same touch on this series as he had on The Avengers. Though I was skeptical, he did it here as well. I just finished reading Ultimate Fantastic Four 1-6 and these characters are interesting to me for the first time.

Sadly Bendis left writing Ultimate Fantastic Four after issue 6. Apparently that’s when he concentrated on reinventing the Avengers, which was certainly a success as far as I’m concerned. Anyway, my hopes are a bit lowered for the rest of the series. I intend on reading it regardless, check back on my impressions.

I may even need to see the movie now…

fantastic four, ultimate, ultimates, ultimate fantastic four, bendis, brian michael bendis, marvel, comic, comics, trade

Blogging On Behalf of Alan

// December 9th, 2005 // 1 Comment » // My Stuff

I have a good friend Alan who somehow refuses to have a blog. The guy adminsters like 300 of them for his CS department, usually has a pile of interesting things to talk about, but still refuses. In response to this, Casey create BloggingOnBehalfOf.us which shows stories tagged with someone’s name, in turn allowing us to blog on behalf of Alan.

Since Al now has a “blog”, I have linked him in my “Links” section.

Alan Baker

X-Men 3: Trailer and New Pics

// December 5th, 2005 // 13 Comments » // My Stuff

The trailer is out! I just watched it. Twice. Then frame by frame. I think this is going to rule. Wolverine, Magneto, Professor X, Rogue, Iceman, Mystique, Storm, Cyclops, and Pyro are all back. Notably absent are Nightcrawler, Sabretooth, and Toad. New to the scene are Angel, Beast, Kitty Pryde, Juggernaut, Callisto, and the reborn Jean Grey as Pheonix!

The director has changed from Bryan Singer to Brett Ratner (Rush Hour 1 and 2, The Family Man, Red Dragon) which is of slight concern, but I still have great faith. I refuse to be a pessimist about this film.

Anyway, there were more pictures released at USA Today today as well.

In sadder news, Jackman has announced that he is unlikely to return for a fourth film, but the positive side of that is his intention to do a Wolverine spin-off movie due in 2007.

Wolverine, Magneto, Professor X, Rogue, Iceman, Mystique, Storm, Cyclops, Pyro, Nightcrawler, Sabretooth, Toad, Jean Grey, Pheonix, Beast, Angel, Juggernaut, Kitty Pryde, Callisto, X-Men, XMen, X-Men 3, XMen 3, X3, bryan singer, brett ratner, movie, movies, entertainment, comic, comics, comic books

What’s XOAD?

// December 3rd, 2005 // 3 Comments » // Technology Bits

According to XOAD.org:

XOAD is a PHP based AJAX/XAP object oriented framework that allows you to create richer web applications.

XOAD, formerly known as NAJAX, has many benefits:

it uses JSON and native PHP serialized objects to communicate,
special attention has been paid to security,
supports server side events (observation),
client side events (XOAD Events),
server and client extensions,
HTML manipulation (extension),
Caching (extension).
And more

As a PHP programmer, this is an exciting idea. I’ve used SAJAX, but it is not as easy as I think it could be. If XOAD improves on this, then this is cause for celebration.

Here are some example apps.

XOAD, PHP, AJAX, SAJAX, XAP, JSON, OOP, web 2.0, programming, web, internet

ecto for Windows Still Blows

// December 1st, 2005 // 3 Comments » // Technology Bits

Alex, the lead developer for ecto for Windows, has commented a few times on my ecto for Windows Blows post. I figured they’ve been through a few versions and it was time for me to give them another shot. Alex seems to be putting a lot of care into the product, and as a developer myself, I know how frustrating it can be to get either useful feedback or overly generalized complaints (a la something “blows”). I hadn’t looked at it since August, so why not.

I downloaded it again. Which itself was somewhat difficult. Have you Google searched “ecto windows” lately? The first promising link is misleading as it leads to an old version (1.0.3) which in itself has a link to a broken download. Anyway, I found my way to the homepage and grabbed 1.8.7

On first glance, I’m not satisfied with the spell check, I’d prefer if it checked constantly, sorta Word style. Also, a quick trial on the new keyword feature didn’t actually work, but that is likely because of Wordpress not explicitly supporting it, not necessarily their fault. Another annoyance at this point is that the ping action threw me a non-descript error about “Internal Server Error” no clue why, or how to fix… One last comment, a lot of my posts have relative links to images in the posts. Anyway these could be rewritten to take account of my blogs hostname so they don’t all show broken? On that note, why do none of these previews use my site’s template somehow? Maybe that’s configurable and I just didn’t look deep enough.

Oh crap, I just noticed a final straw to break the camel’s back. My posts in the system that are drafts are showing up in ecto as “Published”. That won’t fly.

I guess I still can’t commit to using ecto for windows (in fact I’m not using it on the mac anymore either) The built in Wordpress interface is simple, and for now that continues to win. Truthfully many of the problems I’m experiencing may be attributed more to Wordpress or the underlying APIs, but either way I still can’t use the product. Nor will I be recommending it on campus as we roll out potentially 30,000 blogs

wordpress, ecto, windows, desktop blogging, blog, blogs, blogging, api, apis, movabletype api, google, review, software review

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