Yeah, the Longbox digital distribution platform looks pretty rad and I'm looking forward to its release. Yeah, it'll be great for comics to have a stable, secure and quality-controlled outlet for digital reading, if things pan out. I like digital comics so much that I'd make the shift to buying single issues pretty much exclusively online if I could, with my bookshelf space reserved for trade paperbacks and hardcovers.
Here's the problem with oversimplifying the dream, though: Industry-wide digitization alone can't hope to solve comics' problems or restore any perceived past glory - The only way to get more people to read comics is to make more comics people want to read.
So this "former glory," which I take to mean greater overall circulation AND overall profits of mainstream comics can't really be achieved with a new platform alone. I don't want to nit-pick Giz to death, it just has to be said.
Comics are currently a boutique industry with a core group of regular consumers and readers and the majority of sales are made to genre fiction fans. That's cool - I'm one of them. I rock the Spider-Man books every week along with my indie hardbacks. It's all gravy to me. The problem is, tablets can only work if they bring in new readers with new content. Making comics easier to find and possibly reducing their price (to reflect diminished overhead of production and distribution) might make existing fans pay for more total tiles overall, but a reader's existing weekly comics budget wouldn't necessarily expand. So unless publishers (and the greater comics community) can find a way to expand comics' core consumer base, the money will just get smeared around in a broader configuration. Spreading the love is great for creators seeking an audience, but money is ultimately what keeps quality creators' schnozes to the grindstone.
That's not to say the opportunity to bring in all-new or previously-incapacitated eyes isn't there. Mobile comics have done very well on the iPhone, demonstrating that outside readers are willing to take a chance on a free or $1 read of fare familiar to the comic shop crowd. I'm just not convinced these outside audiences are sticking around for the long-haul, especially when a lot of the hottest content takes awhile to go digital.
That said, the only way for comics to move ahead is by changing the way potential audiences think about comics. Gizmodo may have missed the mark equating the past with a model comics should aspire to return to, but the site's enthusiasm for a brighter future is something every fan should embrace. It won't be easy, especially with superhero films and mainstream media coverage reinforcing longstanding cultural stigmas equating sequential art with capes and tights, but if tablets and other technologies are used wisely, a coordinated comics outreach could hopefully capture the hearts and minds of those on the fence about turning their attention to panels on pages.
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Wednesday 28 October
By Rich Johnston
Is it possible that more people are reading comics right now than for decades? Just that they are doing so illegally?
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Wednesday 28 October
By calebandrew
Completely - but I felt like that was a hot-button issue deserving of its own column. There's a huge generational chasm dividing fans when it comes to download ethics, and that's something I'm planning to explore very soon.
Wednesday 28 October
By Laura Hudson
I'm sure a lot of people are reading comics online, legally or illegally, but there's a big jump between that and saying that there are significantly increased numbers of people flocking to the medium. It seems a lot more likely to me that most of the people downloading CBRs on any regular basis are at least occasionally picking up either singles or GNs at the comic shop, and very unlikely that the ability to view digital copies on terrible readers has brought in a host of entirely new customers that have never hit up an LCS, especially if we're talking Marvel/DC.
Think UVs vs. PVs, web guy.
Also, if we've learned anything from the monetary success of webcomics and even print comics that distribute all or some of their content online, it's that enjoying something digitally doesn't mean that reader aren't interested in buying print and particularly collected editions of the same content.
Wednesday 28 October
By copacetic
I just linked to this article via Twitter - great write-up, and it cements my view that iPhones really would not be ideal for viewing comics. Not because I'm any sort of purist (I buy comics as well as download them depending on my financial situation!) but constantly zooming in and out of the iPhone screen to read comics and take in the art detail - not worth it.
What I would heartily suggest is that people save their money and buy used tablets, put Ubuntu on them for faster boot, and read comics via Comix, the app for reading CBR files. That way you have a bit more of a landscape view to reading comics, and you can carry loads of them on the tablet's hard drive or an 8gb flash drive for that matter!
http://www.myfacehasapunchinit.com
http://www.twitter.com/fknrat
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Thursday 29 October
By 3!LL
Josh just sent this over to me. I'm flattered. :D
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Saturday 31 October
By Sage Ashford
No. I keep up with all piracy scenes. It is, in fact, NOT possible. The LARGEST comic-sharing site, with hundreds of thousands of comics on it--pretty much anything not Marvel or Image, has a membership of 7,000 people, with a max number of people on it at once only 300.
Torrents barely go past 200 complete downloads. And even THESE people are often from other countries (not to say there aren't plenty here doing it too). Comics has many problems, but illegal file-sharing is one of its smallest.
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