Tweets for the week of 2010-10-31

  • Revisions for the day begin with one of the characters saying "The hardest part is getting started." The clown-faced guy speaks truth. #
  • "THAT'S the wrong woooooord, and it's iiiin the wrong plaay-haayyyce. *sings the revision song* #
  • I'm already really happy that we've switched the biweekly Wednesday game to weekly, and we haven't even gotten to the second session yet. #
  • Scrivener for Windows Beta is out: http://bit.ly/9YfO96 #
  • 110 pages of edits/revisions today. Roughly the same amount left to do, but that's misleading, because I've finally reached the Hard Part. #
  • Random Average: The Library of Worlds, Part One http://bit.ly/9B35HI #
  • And the show was good too. RT @DaphneUn: Just watched the new Sherlock: Study in Pink with @doycet. Brilliant and funny and SMART. #
  • "Due to call volume, call-wait time may be… one hundred… twenty… five… minutes." O.M.F.G. #
  • (I'm calling a state government agency's office. It took forty minutes of REDIALS to get into the two-hour queue.) #
  • *whistles along with the hold music, which he has now memorized* #
  • … annnd my call disconnected in the middle of talking to a real person. #eyestab #
  • Stephen King's "From a Buick 8". #booksthatfreakedmeout — it's a regular re-read for me. #
  • Speaking of #booksthatfreakedmeout I'm reading The Stand right now. Every time someone coughs or sneezes, I have to repress a freak-out. #
  • RT @dboshea: 3rd campaign sign seen blowing like tumbleweed in today's driving wind, like God is trying to scour bullshit from the earth. #
  • The graffiti app for Droid shouldn't make me as happy as it does. #
  • Gah. Note to self: never tweet the word that rhymes with 'bumbleweed' ever again. Silly rt spambots. #
  • Highlight of my day has been my dad NOT calling to say he's had a cancer relapse. Otherwise? A crappy morning. Whattaya got for me, Twitter? #
  • Another home repair successfully 'rigged. Would be nice if the book revisions went as fast. Pity I can't use decks screws on the manuscript. #
  • 1288385988872.jpg http://flic.kr/p/8P4oEA #
  • Trying this picture post one more time. http://flickr.com/#/photos/doycetesterman/5127034270/ #happyhalloween #
  • RT @boymonster: This year for Halloween I am going as "Guy in Jeans." #
  • Man, the water in the pool is SO clear and clean today… #newgoggles #
  • Steam (Punk)? (http://j.mp/bMADJ4) – "Where, exactly, is the punk?" A elephant in the room I've pointed out a couple times. #

Tweets for the week of 2010-10-24

  • I just learned how I'm going to die: it's called 'The Entourage': a 10oz hamburger between two grilled cheese sandwiches. #yum #
  • EeePC seems to have asploded overnight. May be time to try the F9 F9 F9 reinstall. Won't lose files, but I will lose many installed apps. :( #
  • A Cool Thing on Monday: Rollabind (http://j.mp/a16QcG) – For the office supply nerds in my posse. #
  • RT @fredhicks: The new Doctors Without Borders RPGNow bundle contains Don't Rest Your Head http://bit.ly/9a51LO — Good cause, great games. #
  • A *fine* pairing with my post today: RT @jeffkirvin: "I guarantee the Big Six take the wrong lesson from this." http://bit.ly/9No3tT #
  • Notes from a stay at home dad (http://j.mp/dtf99Z #
  • RT @ebertchicago: There's something I'd like to make clear. I'm not a breast fetishist. I'm a cleavage fantasist. #
  • The Solo Adventures http://on.atom.com/dxSCLr — better than anything Lucas has done with Star Wars in the last 15 years. #
  • Random Average: Finding the fun in Star Wars again http://bit.ly/9BYELy #
  • Because he IS. RT @DaphneUn: Watching the original Star Wars with @doycet and Trixie. He keeps telling her R2-D2 is the hero. #
  • A quarter of the way through The Revision That Wouldn't Die: Son of the Son of Revision 2 – The Revisioning. #
  • "Giraffes: A Study of Nature's Most Reluctant Heterosexuals." http://bit.ly/97Poj4 #
  • GAH! There's cinnamon and sugar mix covering the whole kitchen counter. What… How am I supposed to… *looks around* *licks counter clean* #
  • You know, I think I like hotdogs because of the buns more than the actual hotdog. #
  • Live Undead – Marketing Draculas (http://j.mp/aY6AS2) – This is the kind of Konrath post I find valuable and interesting. #
  • RT @DaphneUn: Heh. @doycet just called our home remodeling project a "revision" instead of a "renovation." Someone's been writing! #
  • GOD I hate when people take the heel off a loaf, take another slice, then put the heel back. THE HEEL IS THE BEST PART. IT WILL DRY OUT. #
  • Also: what the hell is the deal with not eating the heel? Too much crust? Are you six? Have you ever LOOKED at the hamburger buns you love? #
  • This is the same #foodrage I wade through every time I get back from a trip and find out what the house sitting person did THIS time. #
  • Anyone down in south Denver interested in a Burning Wheel one-shot this evening? #
  • Parkour on a skateboard? (http://j.mp/9SsgHq) – I shouted "What?!?" And rewound a half-dozen times. At least. #
  • Random Average: Burning Wheel (finally) http://bit.ly/bIbtE7 #
  • Okay, am I an idiot, or is there really no way to get a 'recent documents' link off the Win7 start menu? #
  • Even after all this time, this story still makes me laugh out loud. I love it. #revisions #
  • A HA! I found it! Right click on the on the orb. Start menu tab. Customize. Check "Recent Items". #
  • RT @fredhicks: RT @kwnewton: Whoa! Amazon adding a "lend" feature to Kindle – http://goo.gl/07ME #
  • Author: 4chan bootlegging led to big sales increase (http://j.mp/cdAXdl) – Someone tell me again how piracy hurts sales. #
  • I don't normally tweet food, but… Opened brand new containers of: oatmeal, raisins, AND brown sugar for breakfast this morning. So good. #
  • Has anyone else shut off the new version of twitter and gone back to the old design? Besides me, that is. #
  • On my computer and gaming, I drink a soda an hour. At least. Writing? It's 1 pm and there's one, half-empty, forgotten can sitting here. #
  • RT @ebertchicago: 6.43 times more French films than Hollywood films can pass The Bechtel Test. http://j.mp/dwYvgo #
  • RT @tommccammon: Twitter makes you like people you've never met. Facebook makes you hate people you know in real life. #
  • Heading to the roller derby with @daphneun and my five-year-old. Need to establish her role models. #goodparenting #
  • Daughter jamming out to Prince's 'You Got the Look' as we get a slice at Denver's Sexy Pizza. The #goodparenting continues. #
  • Whoa. The line for the roller derby goes around the block. #holymoly #

On Seeing the Inevitable

I have nothing against Joe Konrath.

Those of you familiar with the ins and outs of publishing might be aware of Konrath as a mystery/suspense writer who’s become something of an evangelist for independent epublishing via markets like Amazon where an ‘unsupported’ author can play on a more level field with the Big Six of publishing. His arguments swivel on the dual pivots of sales numbers for his not-inconsiderable backlist and regular pillorying of the publishing industry for its poor choices.

(Which, to be fair, is pretty goddamn easy to manage when publishers make the decisions they do.)

Now, Joe makes a lot of good arguments. His analysis — both of his own numbers and the sales for other independent authors selling through Amazon — is usually pretty solid. And based on that analysis (and what I can only call common sense) it’s not hard for him to point out mistakes being made by big publishing simply by pointing out the stuff that individuals are doing that works, and the stuff that publishers are doing that yeilds less profit for their authors and more ill-will from consumers.

But with that said, Konrath’s points (or the tone they’re delivered in) do have a tendency to grate after awhile, and I say that as someone who thinks he’s ultimately correct; someone who’s predisposed toward ebooks and the technology behind it; someone who’s currently reading The Stand for the first time (finally), on his phone, unabridged.

I think he’s arguing the wrong point.

Yeah, he’s making good money selling his books at $2.99, at least in part because the lowered price means more people will buy his stuff; the simple fact is that a reader will buy five three-dollar ebooks in a clump, but balk at paying fifteen for one… and even if they ‘only’ buy one or two of those three-dollar books, that’s still more money spent than the fifteen-dollar non-sale.

But who cares? Those are just numbers, and (in my opinion) there are only a few numbers that big publishers care about:

24.
99.

“We sell hardbacks for 24.99, and readers have to pay that price for at least a year before they get a cheaper option. Our industry is built on that model, and we will cut a child before we accept anything that substantively affects that.”

You can find individuals in publishing who don’t feel or act that way, yes. But I tend to think actions speak a lot louder than words (especially when those words are muttered over drinks after work, where their bosses won’t hear). Look at the actual moves the big fish are making, and I don’t think you’ll see strong evidence against my assessment.

“Fine. You think he’s arguing the wrong point,” you say. “So what’s the right argument, smarty?”

In a word: History.

All of this has happened before. All of this will happen again.

Unless everyone in the publishing industry was born after 1990 (I’ve met quite a few of them — they weren’t), none of them actually need to crack a history book or dig into the wayback machine to recall a historical precedent for every single thing that’s happening in publishing today — they’ve lived through them.

I’m not the first person to point out the similarities between what’s going on today in publishing and what happened to the music, movie, and even television industries when digital formats became commonplace enough to penetrate the market. But I don’t think it would hurt anyone if I mention it again, because I will be fucking gobsmacked if anyone making decisions for the big publishers are paying attention.

And I’m not saying “there are a few indicators and patterns you can find in the painful (and painfully mismanaged) changes to, say, the music industry that might work as a kind of vague oracle for some of the stuff happening in publishing.”

I’m saying the changes are identical; each of those ‘predecessor’ industries provides flawless mimeographed blueprints in which we can see big companies working themselves into an obsolescence matched only by… mimeographs.

So here’s my call to everyone in publishing — not just publishers, but agents and writers and most of all readers:

Forget the numbers. Forget the price points and distribution methods and however things have been done in the past. Also, give up on arguing for change based on the numbers — no one other than the converted are listening.

Instead, look at your predecessors. Think back to the time when the music industry howled about cassette tapes and the fact it let kids tape music off the radio… and then howled about burnable CDs… and then unencrypted MP3s. Or think back to television broadcasters howling about VCR tapes… then DVRs.

Did it do any good? What happened?

Think back to the format wars in [pick your industry here]. 8-track. Cassette. Betamax. HDDVD. The fifty file formats mp3 annihilated. Did the money spent by companies trying to introduce their own, brand-specific, copy-protected, file format turn out to be money well-spent?

Think back to the birth of independent artists working without Big Industry Backing in those industries. Were people convinced that there was no way they could make a living — hell, even that there was no way they wouldn’t end up going bankrupt? Was industry backing touted as the only way to be seen as ‘legitimate’? Was electronic distribution seen as a fad? Was pirating of unprotected electronic copies seen as the Ultimate Poison Pill?

What happened in those industries? What continues to happen? Were the big boys ever right? Ever?

I’m going to make some predictions about publishing now, and since I think they’re pretty damned obvious, I will present them as absolutes. Some of them are negative, and some of them are positive, and I’ll leave it to you to figure out which is which. I’m basing every single one of these predictions not on publishing, but on the industries that have already gone through what publishing is facing today, while publishing was snickering into its sleeve and making jokes like “How many formats does PAPER have? Heh heh heh.”

  • Most publishers aren’t going to change much. Most — almost all — of their money will be spent on their superstars, and their midlist creators will be seen as (and treated like) dead weight, despite the fact that they make up 99% of authors and most of their revenue. The big names will increasingly become known as vapid pop-culture hit machines.
  • At least one — probably several — big publishers will try to introduce their own ebook reader or ebook format that only works and is only distributed for their products, despite the fact that popular formats exist and are already being whittled down to a few survivors. These specialized formats and branded readers will suck huge amounts of money that could have been spent partnering with existing solution providers and solving the problem with already-adopted tech.
  • A very few traditional publishers will figure out what’s going on and adapt to new models.
  • New publishers will spring up. Almost all of these publishers will be boutique-type studios (sorry, I mean publishers), founded by AUTHORS or AGENTS who figured out how to do everything that needed doing with the new technology, and who decided to turn around and provide those services to a select group of fellow artists they chose to work with… often while teaching them all the same stuff they’ve learned.
  • Artists will continue to produce their own stuff and distribute it through increasingly easier-to-use and easier-to-access avenues. Ninety percept of it will be crap (for each consumer’s own values of crap), but those with enough drive and (obviously) talent will reach their audience and grow a really devoted group of supporters. The writer-equivalents of Jonathan Coulton or Julia Nunes or Pomplamoose are out there.
  • Fans will continue to not give a damn whether someone is promoted by some big publisher or if they did all their own stuff on a Macbook in their basement, because readers don’t give a fuck about publishers and infer no added quality from a pub’s stamp on the spine — most of them don’t know who the ‘big six’ are anyway.
  • As electronic distribution (and web-based shopping) becomes more and more prevalent, and the percentage of electronic vs. analog versions of the same products continues to move toward electronic, brick-and-mortar stores will become progressively obsolete. Physical bookstores already account for less than a third of all book sales — in ten years Barnes and Noble will be the publishing equivalent of Sam Goody and Blockbuster.

Generally, all of this will be better for both the author and the reader.

For everyone else, it depends on how willing they are to see the clear and (as far as I can see) utterly unvarying patterns that came before, and how able they are to do something about it.

What I’m saying is this:

If you’re a reader looking at the options out there for ebooks, worried that the whole thing may be a flash in the pan, don’t — the growth of digital format text is inevitable. Unless you have a stunningly bad track record for selecting new technologies to back, it’s probably okay to jump in the pool now.

If you’re an author looking at the possibility of independently producing your stuff, don’t worry about Joe Konrath’s math. Look at one (or all) of these other industries that have been here already and see what kind of artists make independence work for them. Ask yourself if you can be that kind of artist. If you think the answer’s yes, then that should be answer enough.

Tweets for the week of 2010-10-17

  • White Men With Guns–Reconstruction Redux – Keka – Open Salon (http://j.mp/9T9pao) – Just makes me ill. #
  • There are a few stories that leave me exhilarated, yet sad the ride is over, every time I finish them. Tolkein… King… Mass Effect? #
  • You guys remember that one time when you were a kid and you ate so much beef jerky you actually became physically ill? No? Just me then? #
  • The transmedia stuff circulating today is interesting, but… I read up on Transmedial Play and think "Oh. RPGs with a big budget." #
  • I respect the Transmedia idea, but I'm unconvinced it's a thing that a corporate entity can gantt chart. At best, that's astroturf v. grass. #
  • [Blog] Transmedia: Dirty Commie Creativity – http://doycetesterman.com/index.php/2010/10/transmedia-dirty-commie-creativity/ #
  • Gay Sex vs. Straight Sex « OkTrends (http://j.mp/aQR35V) – Innnnteresting. #
  • This is a test to see if I remember how to write using Graffiti text. (Droid app.) Man I miss this. Much more comfortable than the keyboard. #
  • Messing with Vignette after @chuckwendig gave me Hipstamatic envy. http://twitpic.com/2xc24p #
  • Delaware senate debate's on CNN right now. Ouch. Joe Biden must be spinning in his grave right now. #
  • Once again, I find myself vaguely annoyed by the degree to which I've parsed my interests into multiple blogs, rather than one. #
  • Random Average: A hard lesson from Bioware http://bit.ly/a9DkHC #
  • [Random Average]: A hard lesson from Bioware http://bit.ly/cDGMek #
  • RT @drhorrible We made this video #Remains to celebrate the release of the #Dollhouse S2 DVD. http://twe.ly/5-i in reply to drhorrible #
  • RT @Linnaeus: Supers RPGs and Comic Book RPGs http://bit.ly/cTdB08 – Possibly the best replacement for 'trad' and 'indie' game lables, IMO. #
  • This is How I Get It Done: Making a quick ebook with Jutoh (http://j.mp/cfM7r6) – . #
  • RT @rdonoghue: Project management, railroading, and some RPG heresy. http://j.mp/czZBEa — Rob takes my offhand comment and makes gold. #
  • "Take Me Out" by Atomic Tom, performed live with iPhones on NYC subway (http://j.mp/cApdEh) – This is, simply, amazing. #
  • Random Average: “Is is a ’supers or ‘comics’ game?” http://bit.ly/avjpb6 #
  • Dear nine-year-oid with the brassy red dyejob and black nails, reading seventeen: you make me kind of sad. #
  • Know what else makes me sad? "Your flight has been delayed 2 hours." #
  • A collection of links on sexism in gaming: http://wundergeek.blogspot.com/2010/10/sexism-in-gaming-list-of-links.html – today's reading. #
  • 'I am grateful an indifferent universe conspired to give me life.' (RT @curiouskate09) #
  • I note my spot in The Black Company with a pink-and-glitter bookmark my daughter made. I like how my life has turned out. #
  • I am at another wedding, Twitter. You know what that means #
  • The first worrisome sign: the wedding party have been given barstools to sit at for the duration of the ceremony. #howlongwillthisrun #
  • Oh good: there's a short in the priest's mic. #snapcracklepop #
  • Not to tell the priest his job, but I think it's 'bedrock' of a relationship, not 'rockbed'. #
  • GAH! Lightning struck the church. Oh, no: just the mic. #
  • And now comes… The… Mixing of a Nice Viniaagrette? I really don't get some of hese customs. #
  • The salad dressing appears to be a Catholic thing. Involves oil, wine. The priest keeps looking up at the ceiling like he forgot the recipe. #
  • And the ceremony ends with a traditional Irish blessing – the only time the mic didn't crackle. #appropriate #
  • RT @Ihnatko: RIP Benoit Mandelbrot. Thank God he wasn't murdered. It would have taken the cops forever to draw the chalk outline. #
  • Why YES, I *am* taking advantage of @daphneun's unwilling Designated Driver status. (Later, she gets a footrub.) #pregnancybenefits #
  • The reception is at the family's home. Which means their puppy is here. IN A BOW TIE. http://twitpic.com/2y6owd #
  • People, I don't want to overshare, I was just in the nicest portapotty I have ever seen. Seriously: I should provide photos. #
  • For all I make fun, I want to say: Hooray for weddings. Hooray for love, and its celebration. Faith? Orientation? Pheh. Hooray for Love. #

This is How I Get It Done: Making a quick ebook with Jutoh

This one’s going to be short, because I’ve kind of been looking at this screen all day.

A few days ago, I asked if anyone would be interested in getting all of my NaNoWriMo advice posts pulled together into some kind of epub format.

The answer was “yes.”

I kind of ignored that for a bit, because frankly I didn’t know where to start with creating something like that, beyond a PDF; all the stuff I used a few years ago is abandonware.

But today someone sent me an ebook they’d ‘just slapped together’ in eCub, so I went and looked at that.

It seemed fine, but I did notice this bit:

eCub does not do WYSIWYG or syntax-highlighted editing.

Hmm. I may be reading that wrong, but it sounds like it doesn’t do something like “highlight that word and hit ctrl-I for italics.” So… may a little simpler than I wanted.

But then I read:

You may like to consider the Jutoh ebook editor for easier, WYSIWYG editing, more sophisticated import, and greater configurability. Jutoh also handles footnotes, index entries and other aspects.

Well, that certainly seemed a lot closer to what I was looking for.

So I grabbed it, installed it, and got to work. First, I saved copies of all the individual posts as html files, then I pointed Jutoh at that directory full of a mess of html files, images, links, and… you know, stuff, and said “Do something with that, wouldja?”

Here is the result — This is How I Get It Done – Daily Kicks in the Ass for NaNoWriMo Authors, in:

It took me longer to get a decent picture of a composition notebook cover than it did to format the first chapter.

Now… it wasn’t THAT easy — I spent most of the afternoon cleaning out text I didn’t need, and dropping some (but not all — or even most) of the comments from the posts. And I had to recenter pictures and format the captions and…

Okay, yeah, it took awhile, but it was a piece of cake.

The end result (at least for the .mobi – I can’t check the others) is a document that Kate can read on her Kindle and I can read on my phone. The text formating is clean, the pictures are totally legible, the table of contents works perfectly, and all the links to other people’s websites (the commenters, for example) are live and do exactly what they should. I’d love to hear how it works for you guys on your readers of choice.

Unavoidable Snark: A whoooooole afternoon to format a clean, readable, twenty-three thousand word ebook with pictures and an extended reading list that reaches out to the rest of the internet. Yeah. Wow. I can totally see why publishers are charging as much for ebooks as hardbacks. Totally. Yeah.

Finally, for those folks who just want it in their browser, here’s the complete collection of the original posts.

Transmedia: Dirty Commie Creativity

A few weeks ago, I finally caved in and picked up StarCraft 2, motivated in no way by the promised playability or fun of the game (which it delivers), but by a heartfelt desire to blow up some internet-friends (still an unrealized goal).

(Has anyone munged “internet friends” into some kind of cool portmanteau yet? Something like frenemies? Frienternets? Interiends? Podbudsters? Hmm.)

Anyway, playing Starcraft again (it feels a lot more like ‘again’, rather than ‘a whole new game’) produced an interesting effect about four or five evenings in.

It made both me and Kate start up Mass Effect 2.

Now, I was going to write about Mass Effect 2 a little bit, but I’ve done that before, more than a few times.

And anyway, I got distracted by some folks on twitter (Tweeps. Why isn’t there a generic-internet version of “tweeps”?) talking about transmedia.

This happens fairly regularly. Every few months, someone who is metallurgically balanced so as to ping my radar will throw out some thoughts on transmedia and stir that particular brain-turtle up. I’m going to take the opportunity to write about the subject while said turtle is still awake and munching on lettuce.

Trasmediwhat?

So: transmedia and transmedia storytelling. The idea is that the gestalt product of a creative project (hereafter, “the content”) grows into some kind of all-permeating thing that sort of wraps up, envelopes, soaks into, saturates, and generally penetrates the content audience’s lifestyle from multiple directions and via multiple media platforms. There are some pornography analogies I could draw, but that specific image isn’t really the goal of a transmedia product (unless a corporation gets hold of it); and I don’t think transmedia creators actually want to engender some kind of unhealthy obsession with their content beyond what one might see from the typical Whedonite or a Beiber fan.

Basically, a transmedia project (theoretically) develops its story across multiple media platforms in order to provide different entry points into the story. For example, one transmedia project might include books, blogs, ‘in-fiction’ twitter feeds, movies, youtube videos from fan-turned-creators, interactive text adventures, RPGs, and shared-author stuff like the Mongoliad or a storyball. Each one of these entry-points (and each piece of content within a particular platform) has a role in the big picture of the whole project, and a set ‘lifespan’ in which it is allowed to affect the big picture.

Did you pick up on the fact that some of those content-affecting inputs would be ‘fan’-created? I hoped you might — it’s an exciting and interesting concept, because if Twitter has taught us anything at all, it’s that all writers are also readers, and most readers are also writers, and everyone’s a fan/geek/nerd about something, so why not harness that awesome creative power and make it into something bigger than any one person? Coordinated storytelling across multiple platforms (even assuming that ninety percent of it is crap) cannot help but make the whole story more compelling.

The “coordinated” part is important, obviously; hence the need for set lifespans in which different elements can affect the core content.

Is this even a new thing?

It’s a fair question. When you talk about transmedia, you quickly start talking about activities that fall under the (shiny, new, plastic) umbrella of “transmedial play”, which. . . well, let’s just quote wikipedia on this one.

The viewer/user/player (VUP) transforms the story via his or her own abilities, and enables the Artwork to surpass the medium. It is in transmedial play that the ultimate story agency and decentralized authorship can be realized. Thus the VUP becomes the true producer of the Artwork. The Artist-authored transmedia elements act a story guide for the inherently narratological nature of the human mind to become thought, both conscious and subconscious, in the imagination of the VUP.

To which I respond “Oh. RPGs. But fancy.”

And what about Harry Potter?

It’s easy to look at a lot of the big-paycheck intellectual properties and think “but seriously: this is already being done.” Harry Potter is out there in books, movies, video games, slashfiction, web comics, youtube parodies, fan created vignettes, and hundreds of other things I’d probably rather not know about.

But that’s not really what this transmedia thing is aiming for.

To which you say: “What?”

See, an example like Harry Potter isn’t (as the jargon surrounding this discussion dictates) transmedia, it’s “crossmedia” — in crossmedia, the IP crosses over to new media platforms only to spread out the original content as far as it can — the stuff beyond the books isn’t delivering new content or growing the ‘canon content’, they’re just new delivery vectors for the original content, and as for the other stuff? The slashfic and youtube fanvids aren’t acknowledged at any point in the cycle as being a ‘real’ part of of the Harry Potter collective creative product in the first place. Conversely, transmedia is designed for multi-platform multi-author hacking.

And again, that’s some pretty heady stuff — there’s no more fertile ground for innovation than a diversity of experience.

But… no one’s really doing this yet?

Here’s the thing: I think it’s being done by accident right now, and largely by people who don’t realize they’re doing it.

To take Mass Effect 2 as a (bad) example, even as I play the game I’m making up stories about the characters or other background elements in my head, because as much as there is going on in that game already (dozens of stories above and beyond the main arc), there’s tons of stuff that only gets alluded to, and those are places my mind likes to go play. I’m also wearing an N7 sweatshirt when the house gets a little chilly in the evening, and I’ve read or at least considered reading the novels/comics/whatever set in the ME2 universe that have nothing at all to do with the storyline of the games, but which add more depth and meaning to the game by thier inclusion in the net product. I’m saturated. Permeated.

But as I said, that’s not a great example. None of my head-stories have an access point by which they can be incorporated into the creative whole. I’m saturated in this content only insofar as I want to become so (heck, even when I wear the sweatshirt, it’s at least somewhat ironically).

Dragon Age (also by Bioware) gets closer in this regard simply because you’ve got the game, the extra content for the game, the flash-based spin-offs, the expansions, novels and comics that provide some intertextual depth to the setting without rehashing anything from the game itself, AND a tabletop RPG (and supporting forum) that lets you play around in the setting sandbox and create your own stories and hacks and narrative, then share it with your fellow fans in that context.

No: that’s not a perfect realization of the ideal, but I believe it’s moving in the right direction; it has a lot of the ingredients in the bowl. And if it’s not right (not yet), that’s not the point — even the failure has value. I don’t think lightning is suddenly going to strike and someone will magically produce a perfect transmedia product/template. Most great ideas don’t come as flashes of insight following brilliant successes — they come after a series of epic fuck-ups and spectacularly useless failures.

(Like, say, Google Wave; the ultimate solution-in-search-of-a-problem. Ten years from now, someone will turn that “wasted” software development and make something pretty goddamn amazing out of it. You watch.)

Why do you keep using examples from gaming?

Lots of people who get excited about Transmedia seem to want to start from books and work out from there. Those same people ask things like “how can publishers take on the author’s work to help it become truly transmedia?”

I think that’s… adorable. Also? Woefully myopic. How is a publisher supposed to help someone writing books expand their creative content into an arena neither they nor (presumably) the author knows anything about? What the fuck does Knopf know about creating a flash-based game or ARG meant to share a linearly independent story spun off from the Book they just put out in hardback?

Jesus, most of them can’t even get their heads around ebooks with anything better than 1996 cognition, and those are kind of the same thing (for now).

No, if you want to jump platforms, you need people who get that OTHER platform as well as you get the platform you’re starting with.

(And there should also be people keeping an eye out for new platforms that don’t currently look like platforms. Some of the best ‘inventions’ come from people repurposing something in a smart way. (GPS technology was originally created to help us bomb the fuck out of other people, for example.))

My point: all the platforms need to be treated with equal care, and if all the platforms are equally important, than it doesn’t matter which one you start on. Gaming (in my opinion) has always done a lot more stuff related to multi-platform creative content and “audience as author” creation, so I tend to start there (but I can be wrong, too).

Again, there’s that chime: audience as author. Author as audience. Innovation via a diverse group of creators.

I’ve been reading Where Good Ideas Come From on my Droid, and there’s a lot in there about co-mutual creation that touches on the potential power of transmedia — the creative output of many people, provided that all those people have access to the “stuff” — the gears and parts that make up a transmedia product. Leave all that stuff lying around, mix in interested and excited people with different experience, give them a reliable means to share good ideas or good notions or even half-baked half-ideas, and let it all simmer someplace that doesn’t punish failed experiments or cockblock anyone messing with the Holy Writ of the Original Content Creator, and you might get something pretty damned special.

Someplace. Someplayce.

Play. Excited, energized creation-as-play.

Now ask again why I keep using gaming examples.

Working Like a Rockstar (The October Forecast)

My short-term contract job came to an unhappy/happy end on Friday. And while you might assume ‘unhappy for me’, I’d have to say that the real unhappiness was felt by my now-ex-employers, who really wanted me to stay and really liked me; they just ran out of budget.

They liked me so much that my boss basically wrote the new update to my resume, bragging me up even more than I usually do myself. Contract jobs are actually pretty good in that way — you can come in like a superhero, smash the crap out of problems, gird yourself in accolades, and leave before office politics sully your fancy spandex costume.

The big trick is making sure you’ve got somewhere to land when you leap over the next tall building in a single bound. (Freelance writers will find this kind of thing very familiar; it’s a kind of rockstar lifestyle, assuming one reads that to mean “striving to see the difference between homelessness and living out of a tour van.”)

I may have a new gig lined up pretty soon — another -opolis that needs saving from an Atomic Menance — but to be perfectly honest I’ll be happy if there’s a bit of a lag before the next corporate thing.

I am ready to do some other things.

Let’s review what’s on the to-do list.

New cub.

There’s a new kid on the way to the Casa, so there are more than a few home projects going on. The kid’s room is actually pretty much ready to go, but in the meantime we’ve been working on other rooms in the house.

We’ve painted our bedroom and the front greatroom, and of course Kaylee’s new bedroom needs to be framed in and painted and carpeted and all that cool stuff, but we’re letting some professionals handle that, even though I’m pretty sure I could nail (heh) the framing part.

Then there’s painting the house itself. The outside. We must — absolutely must — paint the whole thing before winter, or we’ll need to replace all the siding next summer, and if I’ve got some time before the next gig, I’ll probably be doing that myself and saving us mumble-hundreds of dollars.

The main problem with this cunning plan is that there are three spots where the siding needs to be replaced, and of course the problem spots aren’t anywhere a mook like me could handle it — they’re complicated places like where the chimney meets the house, right under the eaves.

By the way: if you’re in the market for a house, or planning to build one? Fuck chimneys. I don’t care how much you want a fireplace; don’t do it. Embed a firepit in your deck or something. Chimneys are to houses what a bad smoking habit is to an otherwise healthy person.

Anyway. I am pretty much ready to go with the painting thing, but we’re going to have to wait until we can get these sections fixed by someone competent experienced.

Why isn't it ever simple?

NaNoWriMo is on the horizon, and the prepatory murmurs are audible even at this great distance. Some folks have asked if I’m ‘doing’ it again this year which… c’mon. Of course.

But I’ve got a lot of other stuff to do first. A publisher handed me some revision requests which — damn them — are actually really good, so I want to get those done and handed back to my awesome agent before October is dead and gone.

What will I be writing?

Actually, I have a story to finish that needs at least another 50k (well, two, actually, but I’m picking one over the other), so I’ll be getting it down. Yes, I know you’re not supposed to do that with NaNoWriMo, but at this point, I think I’ve done it legit often enough to pfff those kinds of restrictions.

But that’s just me; if you’re trying to finish NaNoWriMo for the first time, BY ALL MEANS OBSERVE THE RULES. Doing it my way (picking up an unfinished story) is actually making the whole thing harder; I’m just stupid self-challenging that way.

What would I write if I weren’t working on something extant? I dunno.

I’ll tell you what I wouldn’t suggest, though: steampunk.

I love the stuff currently lumped in under the heading of ‘steampunk’. Love it. But steampunk is kind of like vampires right now; something people mix in because it’s cool, not because the elements are being used in any kind of meaningful way. I’m getting sick of it.

You want to use the trappings? Fine. Call it whatever it really is, though — zeppelin fantasy, gogglerotica, or whatever.

Punk anything requires class struggle, the social effects of technological revolution, and people with no influence and power rebelling against a monolithic Authority.

Slapping goggles on your protagonist doesn’t make it steampunk.

Ahem. Anyway. Rant over. There’s my advice for NaNoWriMo. At least for today.

Hey, that reminds me.

Last year, I wrote a bunch of NaNoWriMo advice, broken down for day-by-day consumption. People seemed to dig it (and I’ll probably repost them to twitter as appropriate), but would there be any interest in seeing all those posts brought together into some kind of ebook-like thing prior to the start of the madness?

Not to buy, obviously — I’m not wondering if there’s money in it — I’m wondering if there’s enough interest to justify the work of putting it together before 11.01.10.

Is that it? I think that’s it. Damn but I’m out of practice writing these things — this post was all over the place — I’ve got blog-rust all over the keyboard now. Hopefully tomorrow will be better.

Nothing like being blocked from your own site during the day for the last two months to make you really pine to get some blogging done.

Updates for the week of 2010-10-03

  • Oooh. It makes me angry when one of those twitter analysis things posts something 'for' me when I specifically tell it not to. #
  • Burning Wheel blue balls — yeah, there's an image. I remain frustrated with the failure ratio for Skype-based game sessions. #
  • Phone hunting soon. Anticipated getting an Incredible, but the Droid 2 has a lot to recommend it — I am a BIG fan of longer battery life. #
  • Roaming bookstores isn't as much fun anymore. #dontfindouthowtheymakethesausage #
  • As a newcomer to political giving-a-crapness, I'm unsure what I should feel in election years. Pretty sure "ever-increasing dread" isn't it. #