| Weblog: |
|
iLike iComic
|
| Subject: |
|
I'll JoT down a few reasons we don't like these aps... |
| Date: |
|
2003-11-24 13:12:53 |
| From: |
|
snaggy
|
|
|
|
"The only obvious problem is that this steals impressions from sites that depend on advertising."
Nitrozac and I are not big fans of these kinds of aps. Sure, there's a slight chance it may allow more people to see our work, but they do miss out on a lot of the fun, and we take a bigger hit cost-wise.
Besides depriving us of a few micro-cents on advertising, the less obvious ones are...
-adds to our bandwith costs.
-these aps create a ton of error messages when they can't find the proper comic.
-takes away from the Joy of Tech user experience... for instance, there no chance the user will find Relevancy Links, or do the JoyPoll, or click embedded links that may be in the comic.
-people miss out on all the fun in our Forums. :-)
Ok, just a view from the artist's side of things. :-)
|
Showing messages 1 through 4 of 4.
-
Point/Counterpoint
2003-11-24 15:22:12
tweep
[View]
-
Re: Point/Counterpoint
2003-11-25 10:41:22
anonymous2
[View]
-
Re: Point/Counterpoint
2003-11-25 10:40:39
anonymous2
[View]
-
I'll JoT down a few reasons we don't like these aps...
2003-11-24 14:58:18
anonymous2
[View]
|
Showing messages 1 through 4 of 4.
|
I liked it so much, in fact, that I wrote the plugin for my comic and shared it with the other iComickers; doing so helped me address some of the concerns raised above and got me a few new readers in the process. I was able to streamline the process of retrieving and downloading the strips so that it would take no more bandwidth than going through the archives by means of the web site (sometimes it takes less bandwidth, in fact) and wouldn't generate any error messages. I was also able to put in links to my main page, forums, and so on (though I don't know how many people actually inspect that little drop-down menu of links).
It could be argued that those of my readers who use iComic to view the comic "aren't doing me any good" (for lack of a better phrase), in that if I had advertising or a store on my website, they'd never see it. But, the way I figure it, perhaps the iComickers will come through by telling their non-iComicking friends about my strip and my readership will grow.
All that said, I do understand the concerns raised by Snaggy, and they're valid ones. I think maybe RSS will provide an alternative that's still convenient for readers, but allows greater interaction between the creator and his audience.
So I've got one of those, too. ;)
- Ben
Comic:
http://www.tweep.com/comic/
iComic plugin:
http://www.tweep.com/downloads/Tweep.comic.sit
RSS:
http://www.tweep.com/backend.php