Thomas Pugh’s Blog Tour: Welcome to Rollicking Tales!

In some ways I feel a bit of a fraud offering up advice to would be self or small press publishers. After all I haven’t been in the game very long, it was only January that the Rollicking Tales wagon really began to roll. But then, when I come to think about all the things I have found out it has actually been a very steep learning curve. And if I can impart even one pearl of wisdom to a prospective publisher and help get more stories out there, then it will be worthwhile.

As a bit of background I am a farmer with, up until recently, no experience of the publishing world. I’ve been dabbling in writing for a few years but had never actually finished a story, let alone looked at publishing my own or other people’s work.

Then, in the autumn of 2011 I came to the conclusion that it was time I pulled my finger out. However many ideas I had for stories they were never going to see the light of day unless I sat down and actually wrote. A whole story. Right to the end.

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Ask A Progeek – When Do Skills Not Go On A Resume?

And our question today . . .

Are there some skills that are considered too common (like Word) or too bland (like people skills) to be worth mentioning?

In an age of overloaded resumes it’s actually an interesting question to ask – what do we leave out?

The answer, of course, is that there’s no simple yes/no rule.  No, that’s not a cop-out, because the question itself is actually the wrong question.

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Flight Control Rocket: Taking New Payments WAY to far?

I have to say, it sounds like it.  It sounds like they’re monetizing the crap out of the game, and not in a good way, but in the “pay for anything, including a high score way.”

I’ve only just heard about this, but my first impressions are the game is a bit of an experiment/overindulgence in the free-to-play/more-you-pay strategy that’s way, way out of hand.  I’m not surprised – some people are going to take advantage of the model.  I’m concerned about how this plays in modern media.

Of course we know that even if this “isn’t it,” some egregious, bizarre variant of the Freemimum/Pay-to-play monetization model(s) is coming.  That variant will be so annoying, it will get a lot of publicity.  At that point, predictably, many will question the model.

The model in question is just that – a model.  How you use it is the real question, but I’m suspicious in the world of freemium and other different monetization models, mixing up the application and the model is a risk.  In a 25/8 news cycle, things move fast, including predictions of demise of something (ask Twitter), and the brave new world of  new monetization can be called into question in an instant, leaving us to sort out the reality from the bull.

So this story doesn’t surprise me.  But I’mm waiting for the inevitable “freemium/whatever-method is evil” news fest that I feel is likely.

Steven Savage