Previous News02.26.2007 - Terrence Marks:Our bonus book for February will be Silent Emotion, a 12-page wordless comic taking a broad survey of romance throughout You Say it First, Namir Deiter, and Spare Parts. Isabel is writing it. We meant to have a bit more done, but this is only our second week back on a non-graveyard schedule, and we spent last week sick.We're making a lot of progress on January's bonus book, The Best of RL Friends, and expect for it to be done very soon. Also, we'll be adding some of the older bonus books to the library too, in the near future.02.19.2007 - Terrence Marks:Firstly, we've got our bonus library. If you ever donated to us, you should have access to it. We've got the bonus books from July 2006 and onwards for people who donated during those months. We've got two free books for everyone - we just added Headphone Story today. If you want to see Alisa before she was Todd's sister, check it out.
Secondly, the bonus books for people who donated $50 or more during October, November, and December have been sent out. Since it was a two-part story, everyone got a nice 24-page book with both halves of The Babysitter. We're very sorry about the delays. Thank you for your patience. We tossed some bonus stuff as well - we hope you like it.02.01.2007 - Isabel Marks:First off, namirdeiter.net now has a new Terms of Service. It's been a long time coming, I suppose. We never really felt a need for it, but an incident last year caused a need for one. Please read it over before donating. The long and short of it is this: We're going to try our best to give what we promise you and have no intention on NOT doing things. Just please keep in mind real life sometimes gets in the way of updating on time. The TOS is just to, more or less, cover our asses in case something horrible happens so that I can't update for, say, a month. Life can happen to anyone.
Next up...the goal for the month of January was not made. As such, here is the updating schedule for the month of Febuary:
Namir Deiter- Monday through Friday
You Say it First - Monday, Wednesday and Friday
Spare Parts - Monday and Friday
Namirdeiter.net- Bonus comic Tuesday and Saturday. Sketches the other five days.
I should mention, the previous updating schedule (seven NDs, six YSIF, three SP and two nd.net comics a week) was the bonus updating schedule. The schedule we are now in is technically the regular updating schedule, or rather, the schedule the comics would have been on without the donation drive at all.Update: The $800 goal was made retroactively. NamirDeiter.net members will be getting two bonus comics a week instead of just one. (And five sketches instead of six, the other days of the week).
There will be a bonus book for last month (that will feature the Final Battle Adventure cast from Namir Deiter and- well, I won't totally ruin the surprise), and wallpapers. Unfortunately, 2007 has not been a good one so far. Terrence is still on the graveyard shift at work which puts most of the comic work on my shoulders. A burden that has been very rough on me. I'd like to say that I'm wading through the heavy waters, but the truth is, things are starting to get over my head a bit. The schedule for this month will hopefully help me get back on track with things such as the bonus books (the current book due, "The Babysitter, Part two" was supposed to be done weeks ago, but it just did not happen). We owe quite a bit to you $50 donators. Your items from the past two books still need to shipped. They will be sent out as soon as I get the books made, despite some major set backs with the last book (basically, my cat knocked a bottle of water on some of the pages of the bonus book and it turned out much worse than I first thought).
I'm sure there are many reasons for why the goal wasn't made, most of which were my own. The late thank-you items and on-line comics that are chronically late for the past two months have not helped the matter. I'm sure the fact that everyone's bank accounts are still trying to recover from December didn't help either. But for whatever reason some of you did not donate, or could not donate, please know this: thank you for reading the comic and we hope to see you again at namirdeiter.net
For those of you who did donate through this rough spot- thank you. You have shown me quite a bit of faith, despite my trying of it. I only hope that I can live up to it and give you all what you give to me.
01.28.2007 - Terrence Marks:Firstly, Bardsworth. Read it. We discovered each others' comics through ComicSpace, and I enjoyed it very much. It's about a high-school student who finds a gateway to a magical world, where he goes to learn magic. It's quite charming, interesting, and easy to get in to. There are about 150 comics in the archive, so it's established but can be read in one sitting. So why don't you?
Secondly, I recommend any manga by Mitsuru Adachi. He's...if I say that he's the halfway point between Osamu Tezuka and Rumiko Takahashi, it's probably a disservice to all three of them. It's a decent starting point, artistically, at least. His name is synonymous with Sports Romance, a genre that doesn't really exist here. I haven't read all of his stories, but almost all of them involve high school students, relationships, and team sports. His main strength is his ability to create rounded but well-defined characters. There's a lot of manga out there that have a certain fluidity and wispiness to the events and characters. His don't. He's amazingly popular in Japan, but only two of his books have been published in the US - Short Program and Short Program 2. They're collections of short (30-60 page) stories and quite accessible. A lot of his work has been scanned and translated by other groups; as usual Manga Johou is a very good place to start. I'll be honest, I've never finished any of his longer works, but they all seem interesting. The first chapter of Rough is one of the best first chapters I've read (and that's as far as I get with a lot of series), so I suggest starting there. I'm not sure if it's his best series overall, but there's no need to restrict oneself to an artist's best series. On the downside, he works exclusively within one genre, tends towards longer series, and there's (probably) a strong similarity between many of his works. I've never minded authors who write one great book then proceed to rewrite variations upon it. I strongly recommend his work to anyone interested.
I wish there were a stronger drive to translate older manga, officially or unofficially. Maybe it's out there and I can't find it. Maybe I have found it but couldn't recognize it. There's got to be a lot of good manga from the 1980s and earlier, but the only ones I see in the US are the ones that were licensed back in the 1980s. Assuming that quality is consistant across time, there's an awful lot of good stuff that the english-speaking world is missing out on, and I can't stand missing out on good stuff.
Thirdly, I'll be starting a journal comic. I resolve to produce at least 200 updates this year. It's still January. It counts. I'm also going to write at least one chapter each of four new-to-you projects. Those who pay really close attention will recall that I've spent the last couple years dropping hints about working on other comics. Well, I'm going to actually do something about it this year. I'd rather not be the guy who wishes he wrote more, but didn't. And listen to every episode of This American Life that I haven't yet heard.01.15.2007 - Terrence Marks:About a week ago, Namir Deiter's wikipedia article was deleted for "failing to assert notability". Now, I feel that Namir Deiter is notable. If you're reading this far down, you probably do too.
This isn't one of those "go register and vote against our article being deleted" kind of things. I've never been fond of that and, more importantly, there wasn't a vote. It was summarily deleted. I think the idea is that if an article doesn't justify its existence in the first paragraph or two, then they delete it to encourage the others. I wouldn't've minded if it were put up to a vote and lost, or if it were tagged for non-notability. But we're dealing with someone who deletes about 1,000 items a day. It's like turning in homework only to have it torn up and be told to do it again. And it wasn't even homework that we did (disclaimer: I did some minor cleanup and editing). We do greatly appreciate those of you who had created, edited and kept the Namir Deiter article up to date.
I'm not sure exactly what counts as an acceptable webcomics article, and I'm starting to believe that just about any article we create would be deleted regardless of its quality. I see that someone has requested a Deletion Review. If someone here understands wikipedia procedure and can help, that'd be appreciated.
At this point, we have two options: create an article that meets Wikipedia's standards or improve our articles on Comixpedia. Now, about fifty webcomics articles have been deleted in the last two
weeks. Good webcomics articles. Not stubs. Not articles about comics with 10 strips and 5 readers.
The Class Menagerie, Dragon Tails, Gene Catlow, Living in Greytown, Misfile, The Suburban Jungle, and Zortic, to name a few.
The advantage of wikipedia is prestige - or at least it looked prestigious before we became embroiled in all of this - and exposure. The average person looking for an article isn't likely to check comixpedia first. And they have more contributors (which, as you see above, cuts both ways).
The advantage of comixpedia.org is that we'd be able to create articles for our Spare Parts and You Say it First (and, possibly, our older comics) without worrying about them disappearing the next morning. There are fewer people who'd edit the articles, but that's where you-all come in. ND's Comixpedia page is based on a year-old verson of the wikipedia page and has a list of our other comics, all of which are in need of articles.
Anyhow, this is important to us. We don't have the time to do this right and do everything else we do. Why is it important? There's very little journalism about online comics, and we seem to be outside the loop of what there is. A lot of what we do, and what we've done isn't being documented. The page that comes closest to listing all the things I've done is my ComicSpace profile, and I'd rather have a more definite source out there. So, a little help?
Thanks01.01.2007 - Isabel Marks:Welcome to 2007, aka... year four for Spare Parts and You Say it First and year eight for Namir Deiter. I hope you've enjoyed your year so far.Bonus Book status:
October - The Babysitter, part 1 - now available
Special bonus - Taimoor and Dahlia - now available (and filed under "November")
November/December - The Babysitter, part 2 - in progress.
So, that's two bonus books that came out in the last week - if you donated, please read them.
After way too long (over a year in Spare Parts' case) all the archive pages for our three web comics have been updated! Also, the fan centers for Spare Parts and Namir Deiter have been updated with some really cool holiday-related pieces, please be sure to check them out!
NamirDeiter.net, our thank-you site for the people who help keep our web comics going, has gotten an update as well! The page got a non-Holiday related site design, and January's monthly wallpapers have been updated!
We made our goal for the combined months of November and December- which means for the month of January we will have the bonus updating schedule of seven Namir Deiter comics a week, six You Say it First comics a week, three Spare Parts comics a week, plus two bonus comics a week over at NamirDeiter.net. The November/December bonus book has yet to be added to the bonus comic library, but as we're still a bit behind. But till then, please enjoy the fashionably late October book plus the bonus-bonus book for the month of November, brought to you by a very generous donator who wishes to be known as "V".
The bonus book for January will be announced some time later this week!
So, why all the big delays? A little under a month ago Terrence (you may know him as the co-author of You Say it First and Spare Parts, I know him as my husband) went from having a day shift to a grave yard shift. We've been trying to get used to this schedule, but the cold weather and doing nothing but trying to sleep when Terrence is home, it left me with a bit more to do on my own than before, which has made the comicing process... slow to say the least. We're trying to get used to the schedule and get everything back on track, but who knows when that will be. We're very sorry for this and thank you all for your patience, we try to have the comics, at the latest, up at 5am PST on the updating day.Well, 2007 is off to a rough start, as far as updates go- hope your year is great!
12.28.2006 - Terrence Marks:We have a late Christmas present to all of our donors from us and a patron who prefers to remain known as "V". It's a 20-page set of bonus comics showing the past, present, and future of Taimoor and Dahlia. If you've ever had a NamirDeiter.net account, you should go to the NamirDeiter.net Bonus Comic Library and read it!Thank you very much to V for providing an opportunity for us to work on it. We hope everyone enjoys it.
And yes, this is one of the reasons why there was a bit of a backlog for the bonus books a couple months back - we've got a number of the other books in varying states of completion and expect to be caught up soon. Please note that this is not the scheduled November/December bonus book - that one is also in production. Premium donors will not receive any of the originals for Taimoor & Dahlia - they're already spoken for. We were originally going to have just one book for the two-month period, but this happened and, well, here you go. Premium donors will receive pages from the regular December book, however.
And yes, everything is back up to date. Enjoy Friday's comics!