Python Magazine exists!
Mark
mark at pyzine.com
Fri Jun 25 16:25:41 EDT 2004
Hello Tyler,
On Jun 25, 2004, at 3:22 PM, Tyler Eaves wrote:
> Here's the thing, 49 euros is, at current rates, $59.57.
Sorry, we are not willing to accept any responsibility for the weakness
of the US Dollar or the price of Oil for that matter :-)
Considering that not too long ago 49 Euros was far less than 49 USD's
that's just the way
the pendulum swings. All though we think its a shame -- good for our
authors though -- who
get paid in Euro.
> Sorry, but $15 an issue is just too much for a magazine, especially
> since you don't actually
> mail honest-to-goodness dead tree versions. Now, it the cost was more
> like
> $20 a year, I might seriously consider it.
Well give it a few years. Maybe the Euro will drop to that level :-)
But I doubt it.
> It's a simple demand curve. If
> hypothetically, you got 4 times as many subscriptions by cutting your
> rates to 1/3rd of their present value (and I wouldn't say that isn't
> possible, and it may even be conservative), you'd be better off doing
> so,
> as your costs are basically fixed independent of the # of subscribers.
"Basically" fixed is basically incorrect. Beyond simple things like
increased hosting
fees we definitely notice an increase in the amount of email we receive
from our readers.
We certainly aren't complaining about feedback from our subscribers (we
love it) but it is a matter of fact that the more customers you serve
the more time you will spend supporting them.
Our goal is not to publish on the cheap. We'd rather expand our
offerings. Py used to be in the price range you discussed and it was
unsustainable. The "new" Py already features more articles than the
"old" Py. As the subscriber base increases we hope to be able to make
issues longer, publish more frequently, continue to release several
articles for free on emerging Python technology (to help the adoption
of new Python technology), and roll out some other surprises
we are working on.
Fact is we are in this for the long haul. And since subscribers get
access to all back issues, in the case of ZopeMag this is the
equivalent now of a Zope book, the price per page or what ever other
vodoo metric one wants to use -- Py will become less expensive by the
day (not including other factors like inflation) :-) As for a paper
edition Bryan (the former publisher of Py) repeatedly warned us from
publishing a print edition (and backed this up with hard numbers).
The good news is that our subscriber growth is inline with our
projections and as we reach
certain milestones each Py will get bigger not smaller (or dissapear
altogether) and tied to this growth the amount of money (and people)
paid to write about Python technologies.
That was the original reason for writing to this mailinglist to debunk
the myth that
""Nobody gets paid to write articles about Python"
and to make people aware that a 100% Python Magazine exists today!
We may not be able to convince you and a few others to subscriber to Py
today but with the help of a growing subscriber base and a growing
library of more worthwhile Python articles than ever before -- we hope
to win you over eventually :-)
Cheers,
Mark
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