While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:
Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.
This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!
You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.
This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!
You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
Login / Register
- New Linux kernel patch submitted to improve Lenovo Legion series support including Lenovo Legion Go
- Team Fortress 2 Comic issue 7 is finally, officially available
- Stalker 2: Heart of Chornobyl gets a massive patch with an AI overhaul and lots of A-Life fixes
- Valve released the Best of Steam - 2024 showing off the highest earners and most played games
- Sony buy up KADOKAWA shares to become largest shareholder of the FromSoftware parent company
- > See more over 30 days here
View PC info
And the first two topics come also from our boss (all praise the Boss :P):
1) Now there's a pagination option for articles, should we go back to the original layout of TFC columns and group together what has already finished (i.e. Winners and Losers) on one hand, and what's still going on (Still in the Running, Gems, and Biggies) on the other?
2) When preparing a new issue of TFC, should we hold the discussion in the open here on the forum rather than via PMs as we've been doing until now?
Discuss! :)
2. No, I think doing so would detract from the "kapow" of launching the article itself.
2) Originally, I strongly suggested that we work out in the open. However, now that we've run this for nearly six-months (wow!), I'm not so certain that all of our discussion is best aired in public. Sometimes we have requests from the community, which we do our best to write-up, but occasionally for projects that none of us are excited about. Those are difficult to write, but we do our best. Without t the PM thread, we will certainly curtail our grumbling (it's human nature). How will that affect our interaction? I don't know. I fear that the lack of such an outlet for frank discussion will make it less fun (i.e., motivational decrease). Then again, we could show our bias publicly and let the community see which projects we're truly passionate about... I just kind of feel that things we write could be taken out of context, and probably will end up so eventually.
So, that said, I think that all of our "administrivia" should be out in the open, such as issues of formatting and presentation. I think that this thread would be great for readers to interact with us, nominate projects for write-ups, and sign up to contribute if they wish.
We could run a trial issue or two here and see how that pans out, but I'm cautiously skeptical at present.
Ooohh, I hadn't considered that. Are we supposed to get them to click more? I thought we just wanted to share cool projects with them and make them happy :)
Wow, that's even better than my point. Then again, it's not like any part of the article itself is actually secret ;)
View PC info
I'm not sure what to think of the public grumbling part... it's probably ok among community members but getting indexed on google and everything? Hm.
View PC info
1) I don't have a strong formed opinion about this. On one hand it feels more natural to begin with the finished projects and continue with the current stuff, until the grand finale that are the Gems. But on the other hand I'm also afraid of losing readership if we organize the articles in this way (s_d, the more readers TFC has, the more people we can make happy :))
2) While it's true that anyone can see what's cooking by looking at the wiki, I'd prefer to keep our reasons and motives private. We do accept all kinds of suggestions (and this thread could certainly be the perfect spot for doing so), but we of course reserve our right to include them in the final article or not. What we'll never refuse is a fully written review for a Gem of a Biggie! :P
But if someone asks "can you insert my researched review of <game>?", that's wonderful. My only slight concern would be if we start getting lots of requests like this from the team's behind the game - I don't want the Funding Crowd to turn into an advertising agency. People will only read the articles if they're of a decent quality, after all.
Still, it would be great to have a "problem" like that! :D
Going back to the original points - I'm not too fussed about point one, but I really think we should keep the private thread for point 2. Even if we use it less and less (and do a forum post simultaneously), it's still a handy avenue. I don't know you guys, at all, outside of GoL, so I feel we should keep some camaraderie going.
On that last point too, it's probably time to retire Znurre and Rick01457 from the discussion. It's been, as S_D notes, 6 months, and without a peep from either of them. Which is fine, but they're probably just too polite to say "please remove me".
Yes, I don't always have the time to fully explain my opinions in a nuanced way (despite my wordiness). It would be a shame for my words to come bite me later, or worse, to bring grief to a fan or project creator due to my poorly stated private opinion. Not everybody likes everything, or we wouldn't have much of a need for this column at all.
Sounds like we're unanimous on this. As an aside to your second point, it looks like our page view counts are actually pretty reasonable these days! It could all be robots and such, but I like to think that there are happy readers getting involved in crowd-funding.
Goodness, wouldn't that be something! :D
Indeed! Then, surely, we will have arrived...
Yeah, this is fun. I like you lot :)
Speed, would you ping them directly and see? Maybe send a PM asking them to reply if they'd like to be included on TFC #31. That way, if they'd prefer not to, they could have the option of simply ignoring the PM. Of course, an actual response saying "yes" or "no" would be better, but if Scaine is right, then we'll probably not see one.
Then, whomever does the copy-editing (a role I'd volunteered for originally) could send the revised copy to them and ask if they'd like to be credited. That way, if they don't like how it turned out, we could either work with them or simply leave their name off (their choice).
Is that reasonable, or overcomplicating things? I'm just looking at the new open world for this writing and thinking about how we could keep the quality up without upsetting them.
View PC info
I'm afraid that might be due to the pagination: a single reader who clicks on the 2 pages of our latest article counts as 2 views, so I guess we should divide the displayed figure by something between 1 and 2 (I'm sure not everybody gets past the first page, unfortunately) to estimate the actual readership.
View PC info