[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: Re: xml, books
ari@c... (K. Ari Krupnikov) writes: >Do you target books toward a specific category on this list? I've just >gone though Dave P's FO which I *bought* and paged through some months >ago because of (3) but which I didn't *read* until (1) happened. Having >read it, I'm not sure which category it could fit best. The targeting is somewhat vague. Books may certainly have elements of multiple possibilities in them. The topic of a book often determines if people NEED it rather than just WANT it, but a lot of books include seven paragraphs a lot of people need - though everyone needs different paragraphs - and the surrounding material is mostly want. Our Cookbooks have done really well at this, since they're chopped into conveniently reusable bits that address instant need pretty well but also make for good reading if you're into the subject. I also really like Jeni Tennison's _XSLT and XPath On The Edge_ for this kind of reason - between that, the _XSLT Cookbook_, memories of Ken Holman's training (and materials), and occasional help on IRC, I can find my way through lots of different mazes. A lot of our books have been more tutorial. They take some more patience, and probably end up more in the want category as a result. We pay attention to indexes, though, since those are a great way to help people find NEED material in an otherwise WANT book. >Do you have (or release) statistics on how many copies of a given >title yo sell? Sadly for this conversation, no, we don't release them. Even for the data I do have, though, it's inconclusive, because... >Can you say if books that are available online sell >better or worse than those that aren't? Norman Walsh's DocBook for >instance? The problem here is that there's no good way to compare like and like. I don't have an equivalent book to compare it with, much less the same book without the open license. At this point in time, I suspect that Norm's online version gets a lot more reading than our print book gets selling. On the other hand, Norm's updating his version of the book, and doing things like a Simplified DocBook, while our print version has stayed a 1999 book. How this might change if we resynchronized them, I don't know - but I doubt they'd stay synchronized.
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