For those who wanted to see what I've been working on, I'll warn you first that it's EXTREMELY slow, and second that it's a little delicate. I'm working on a faster, stronger, better version (it's all a matter of configuration--I hate web work, sometimes), but I wanted to show off the functionality.
Take a look yonder:
http://comics.emanagr.comI populated the system with some of the smaller-size Avon and Ace books, and right off the bat, you can click through to read page-by-page through low-resolution, low-color, watermarked "try before you buy" preview of all the books.
When you get tired of that, you can create an account--I'm not asking for any personal information, except an e-mail address for confirmation. When you activate your account (which I imagine would cost a nominal subscription fee for a real publisher), you get to see larger and clearer page images. You can also comment on the books (I may add a social networking aspect, if that's something publishers want to support), and, most importantly, download the issues.
Caution: Downloading does work fine, but it's the part that needs the most reconfiguration. Again, it's very slow, and somewhat fragile. If you click the link, please DO NOT navigate away before you get the next page (up to five minutes). Go get a sandwich or play with the dog. You can also open up other tabs or browser windows, but seriously, stay on that page once you click.
You'll be led to the download page, where you'll be asked to "pay" for the book. In reality, this would hook into somebody's shopping cart. Here, click the link and it'll fake out the database. You can then download a CBZ archive, as many times as you want, just like you would here.
The two keys that (I hope) bridge the gap between publishers and customers are the pricing and the anti-piracy measures.
- Prices (as you might notice if you poke around enough) automatically diminish over time to a minimum threshold. By definition, an authoritative source is in competition with illegitimate distribution, and the longer information stays expensive, the more likely it'll be stolen. But I figure that most people would be willing to spend (say) fifty cents on last year's comic.
- Each archive is built custom for the downloader. The watermarking is invisible to the user and presents no inconvenience, but the system can figure out who "leaked" a book. So if someone packages the week's issues into a torrent, you can scream at them, rather than whining about that gul-durn innernet.
If anybody has questions or comments (like if you didn't believe me when I told you not to navigate away from that page, and need me to reset things for you), drop me an e-mail (the envelope icon to the left). And again, if anybody knows a smaller publisher who might want to work with something along these lines, send them my way (or me theirs).
Thanks for indulging me.