Tuesday, September 21, 2010

iPad comics? Or, “Will there ever be an app for that?”

There’s been a lot of hullabaloo about comic apps on the iPad lately.
With print media rapidly declining in popularity, I can completely understand panicky publishers jumping onto the iPad bandwagon in the hopes of recouping readership. The thing that gets me, though, is that print publishers are still expecting digital readers to adhere to the print business model. That is, they expect to sell a relatively small serving of material for a few dollars a pop. That worked for print, but I don’t think it’s necessarily a smart move for digital comics.
Why? Well, for starters you’re asking people to pay a relatively high press for a smattering of offline material that’s locked to a specific handheld device (namely, the iPad) and one that still hasn’t found widespread adoption at that (yet.)
Alternately, webcomics are accessible to nearly everyone on a wide array of online devices. Sure, you can’t read them offline (unless you save the individual pages for offline use, that is) but in five years time, who’s going to be “offline” anyway?
Dear Comic Book Industry: Think Netflix, not iTunes. (But that’s a whole ‘nother rant for another day.)
So will there ever be a Shadowbinders app? I honestly don’t see the point right now. Even if we were to give it away, it’s nothing that you can’t already get for free on your iPad or iPod right now anyway. Seems kind of redundant to me, but if there’s enough demand, we may consider it.
Anyway, the Shadowbinders pages are sized the way they are so as to be easily viewable on an iPad. They’re a little on the large size compared to many other webcomics, but with ever-increasing screen resolutions, I wanted to make sure we were ready for whatever the future might hold.
(Reposted from the Shadowbinders blog)

Friday, September 10, 2010

Digital Comics vs. Print Comics Part XXXVIIII (or, The Cheese is Moving)

Wow... the talk of digital vs. print comics (or illegal scans vs. legal, if you must) has BOOMed all over the place since Mark Waid made those comments.

It seems people's opinions fall into two camps: Waid is a digital prophet, or Waid is a nutty, tree-huggin' hippy. The former tend to be the more tech-savvy creators, while the latter are veterans who make their living in print and are completely FREAKING OUT over the digital revolution (as opposed to, say, learning to be open-minded, flexible and willing to change with the times.)

I made a career change from newspaper editor to "web guy" years ago. Even a decade ago, the writing was already on the wall for print. Why should comic books be exempt?

This came up over on the Disney Comics Forum, when someone posted a link to Beru's Disney Comics Fan Page -- a site that hosts hundreds of Barks, Rosa and Gottfredson stories. People freaked out, and the mods even went so far as to replace Beru's name with "XXX" so people wouldn't go Googling the site.

Ironically enough, that site has been on Disney's radar for years, but they haven't chosen to take any legal action... yet. In a more sane world, Disney would offer their own high-quality scans online for a nominal fee, but that doesn't appear to be something they're interested in doing right now.

Print comics people: The cheese is moving. Are you smart enough to find it?