In response to Bragging Rights
A PDF is an e-book, effectively. I'm really not following how a book (a TeX/DOC converted to PDF, that you print off and send to a publisher) is any more or less capable of being maintained than a PDF. But then of course, that wasn't the point, was it. It seems to me that you got sidetracked in an attempt to out-do digitalmouse and generally lost your way somewhere.

Tiberath pointed to the notion that we would need to muster volunteer writers from somewhere, who would (one presumes) quite like some compensation. Your counterpoint of a company doing it seems rather daft, this is BYOND, the market is way too niche for a company to sink time into producing a book to sell.

I'm generally not sure about this whole talk of price either, I tend to prefer a cost-plus approach to this sort've thing.
In response to Stephen001
Stephen001 wrote:
A PDF is an e-book, effectively. I'm really not following how a book (a TeX/DOC converted to PDF, that you print off and send to a publisher) is any more or less capable of being maintained than a PDF. But then of course, that wasn't the point, was it. It seems to me that you got sidetracked in an attempt to out-do digitalmouse and generally lost your way somewhere.

Adding in new people, maintaining old ones, while mainstreaming the way people get into BYOND as easily and fun as possible which in turn enhance's BYOND profit and community, making future revisions of BYOND's self more likely. Or do I make no sence? might be my english...

I'm generally not sure about this whole talk of price either, I tend to prefer a cost-plus approach to this sort've thing.

If by cost-plus you mean getting the most profit out of each book then I dont suggest it with a first book, really thats why i suggest a multi book course of action. When fishing, you must hook the fish to reel him in right? Why reel in with no fish?
In response to Bragging Rights
No, I mean consider the cost of production, then work a price from that point. The kind of strategy that generally makes the current price discussion nice to know, but a bit trivial.
In response to Stephen001
Stephen001 wrote:
No, I mean consider the cost of production, then work a price from that point

That is kind of tricky, since cost of production is not an easy topic when concerning books.

Are you going to use colors?
How many pages should the book have?
Will you be using print on demand or offset and if offset, how many should you order?

So, for books I'd say, go looking out for potentional customers, see how much they'd be willing to pay and what they are looking for and then not only see if you can manage the cost, but which way would yield most benefits for your intentions (intentions do not have to be only monetary issues here).

P.S.: I just realised I hit $ and meant € when stating what I'd be willing to pay. So make that around 30-35 $ for me (shipping not included).
In response to Schnitzelnagler
I would suggest those questions get answered prior to any serious discussion on price. Cost-plus.
In response to Stephen001
Stephen001 wrote:
I would suggest those questions get answered prior to any serious discussion on price. Cost-plus.

Thats why I made a few examples on books I have and seen. And the most obvious is the amonut of pages againts less but colorful pages.

But the price range for blackandwhite books(and books in general iguess) it usually just varies alot and by amount of pages. Seriously in the end I think it matters much more getting a good publisher or something cause some books are LOADED and are around $20 while others are far less on content and cost much much more. So either its a bad publishing deal or really they just completely overpriced.

Example of great book = http://www.amazon.com/ Game-Makers-Apprentice-Development-Technology/dp/1590596153, just saying cause someone did post the link of it before. But it really is a great book by ANY standards. And yes I have it. Look at the price too. Its just a great offer, how can BYOND not have somethign similar in price and content?
In response to Tiberath
Gift cards!
In response to Tiberath
BYOND could rather easily offer up a new Guide on lulu.com. They do on-demand printing of rather high-quality works, and allow a writer to offer a choice between PDF or hard copy or both. BYOND could, for instance, release a PDF guide for $10 and a hard copy for $25 and I'm sure it'd get some results. Probably not a fortune, but reasonable enough.

Lummox JR swears by Lulu, I believe.

The only hurdle is getting someone who is a good writer, is motivated enough, and is fun enough to read to release a new guide.

A hard copy DM reference, while we're at it, would also garner some good interest.
In response to Jtgibson
Sounds like a good community-wide project to me!
In response to Jtgibson
Jtgibson wrote:
[...]
A hard copy DM reference, while we're at it, would also garner some good interest.

It'd also help people show teachers/professors and friends what it's about, or for working offline (in style, I mean). I'd most definitely buy one if I was given the choice.
In response to Jtgibson
Jtgibson wrote:
The only hurdle is getting someone who is a good writer, is motivated enough, and is fun enough to read to release a new guide.

I don't consider myself a terrible writer, when it came to writing in school (short of essays), I always got high marks. And time isn't a problem at all. Unemployed, bored, restless and desperate all fit into "I'll do it!"

But the other important factor is skill. Whoever wants to write it would have to have a diverse knowledge of DM and yet be able to explain it in the simplest of forms. That is why I don't stick my hand up.

Sure, I'm a DM programmer, hell, I consider myself a reasonably good DM programmer at that, but there is still a lot I don't know. And I pretty much refuse to help people based on my own belief that I'm not good enough to do so.
In response to Jtgibson
Jtgibson wrote:
BYOND could rather easily offer up a new Guide on lulu.com. They do on-demand printing of rather high-quality works(...)

I checked Lulu.com when answering to Tiberath about the cost of offering the guide.
To me, the offers seemd rather out of the line (especially for color prints).
Are you sure that'd be a good choice?
(I try to do constructive and not destructive answers, though I can not name anything better without knowing what the book would look like, which is why I suggested a poll :p)


Jtgibson wrote:
BYOND could, for instance, release a PDF guide for $10 and a hard copy for $25 and I'm sure it'd get some results.

I like the idea of a free pdf guide a lot more, since that leaves you with the option to send people there in order to learn the language or to look things up before asking on the forum.
If they would have to pay, the reply would often be... I'm just looking for xyz and don't want to pay 10 dollar only for that.
Then the argument would start that they would get far more for the money and it would just end up with frustrated people.
In response to Tiberath
Tiberath wrote:
But the other important factor is skill. Whoever wants to write it would have to have a diverse knowledge of DM and yet be able to explain it in the simplest of forms. That is why I don't stick my hand up.

As much as I agree, I would say, go test the product with a few people before releasing anyway and learn/improove it and yourself on the go.
There are sometimes people asking for a "mentor" (id:654725 , id:655659 , ...) and I think these would make a good test reader. The questions and sidenotes the leave to your guide as feedback are what needs to be considered.


Tiberath wrote:
(...)And I pretty much refuse to help people based on my own belief that I'm not good enough to do so.

Without wanting to say you should do the job, acually I think you would make a rather good person to do it.
From what I saw you know are one of the few people I'd say are good when it comes to DM. Sure, you don't know everything, but for a beginners guide, there is no need to!
Actually, you'll have to lower the level ad standards of your code for the guide, so I doubt that should be a problem, even more if you ask others to browse through the guide and your source as well.
I can only say that I saw a lot of helpfull and friendly posts with the name Tiberath above, so I don't think you're that bad at helping people with explaining things ;)
In response to CaptFalcon33035
CaptFalcon33035 wrote:
Sounds like a good community-wide project to me!
Oh my God no.
Then the DM Book v2 will be filled with "How to program Banaki, I can has GM?, Dragonball Transformation, Combat System" (sighs)
In response to Flame Sage
CaptFalcon33035 wrote:
Sounds like a good community-wide project to me!
Flame Sage wrote:
Oh my God no.
'Indentation FTW!'

Agreed. Bad idea.

In response to Flame Sage
Your thoughts are straying too close to the surface. There will need to be a coordinator, there always will be. Besides, do you think those little narutards will be helping with the book anyway? Hell no.
In response to CaptFalcon33035
CaptFalcon33035 wrote:
Your thoughts are straying too close to the surface. There will need to be a coordinator, there always will be. Besides, do you think those little narutards will be helping with the book anyway? Hell no.

I think its too many ppl for that. And we already have a dev how-to forums for those.

I sugest 1 person do the writting of the book. Community could help with some ideas on what to add in the book as in problems and concepts that would be nice to explain. <-- I reccomend this for PDF only, as a friendly/colorful begginer book is still the best option in my oppinion.

Or they could just take out the code that is not best used out of the current DM guide and update it? Maybe adding a handful of other topics on the side? <-- this takes far less time and can help the current users,slightly more.
In response to CaptFalcon33035
CaptFalcon33035 wrote:
Your thoughts are straying too close to the surface. There will need to be a coordinator, there always will be. Besides, do you think those little narutards will be helping with the book anyway? Hell no.

I'd be surprised myself. When it comes to Narutards books without pictures are like kryptonite.
In response to Schnitzelnagler
For a perfect-bound book, letter size, 250 pages, black and white -- pretty typical of any programming guide -- it's only approx $10 per unit. Any price the author charges on top of that is profit, and assuming profit wasn't a goal*, Dantom could easily just charge the original printing cost.

The front cover is in full-colour (included in the standard price) whereas the interior pages themselves are black-and-white.

Seems quite reasonable to me.

When Tom self-published the original Blue Book by ordering a few boxes off of a traditional printing press, it put him in the hole something fierce, and it took a very long while to recoup the cost of printing; the hands-off involved with using an on-demand printer like Lulu would be well worth it, in my opinion.


As for offering a free guide -- that's what Dream Makers is for. I'd much rather see a legitimate, pay-for guide to attract some people with actual money to BYOND! BYOND is good for the kids and all, but unless BYOND is marketed with the fervor (and toy line) of a Japanese cartoon series, the amount of money coming in from them will be less than nil. We need mature, experienced developers -- in the 16+ age bracket -- to start coming back to BYOND.

I myself have more or less stopped doing any BYOND development; I stick around because I grew up with these people moreso than anything else. But my money is always willing to part in BYOND's direction if something good comes up, and it might wind up drawing me back into the fold.


* I think profit is a goal; BYOND has made more progress recently than it has in the past several years combined due to the former chronic lack of external cashflow. I believe Dan also gave up on BYOND half-due to family commitments and other-half-due to it being a haemorrhage on his wallet. =)
In response to Jtgibson
Jtgibson wrote:
We need mature, experienced developers -- in the 16+ age bracket -- to start coming back to BYOND.

If people would stop spending their days spreading useless, pathetic source rips, we'd be fine. People would learn and eventually grow older (I say eventually instead of inevitably because for some people, the mind takes longer than the body). After all, that's what most of us did isn't it? I got here at 15, I'm now 20, and I've donated a fair share to the system I love. =)

But to confirm my ideas on this project. You'd need one to three developers to do it. One to manage the book itself, rewrite sections and keep the flow going nicely. The others to lend assistance if necessary.

This by no means should be a community project. That's just a terrible idea. I happen to agree with the quote "oh god no". Because it seems more fitting than anything.

I also agree with JT. If it is rewritten, take the guide away and leave them with the old one. It still teaches the utmost basics, but if they want something more conclusive and up to date, they have to pay. We have Zilal's and Kunarks tutorials to refer people too.

I'm all for the Money To BYOND theory (which if it doesn't exist, I'm not making it!). I don't want to be sitting here in ten years time, thinking, "Wow, I wish I could jump on Chatters right now... or do something with the language I spent the last fifteen years of my life learning." I want to be sitting here in ten years time, managing ten different BYOND projects, while sitting in Chatters, watching all the new people come in, ask a question, get it answered, leave and make something pretty to further the BYOND Empire. That's what I want to see.
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