Re: [DOCS] Business Plan for PostgreSQL book?
Bruce Momjian <maillist@candle.pha.pa.us>
From: Bruce Momjian <maillist@candle.pha.pa.us>
To: "Henry B. Hotz" <hotz@jpl.nasa.gov>
Cc: "Clark C. Evans" <clark.evans@manhattanproject.com>, PostgreSQL-documentation <docs@postgresql.org>
Date: 1999-10-14T18:14:02Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers
> >If its a group project, I assume you are the "owner" > >of the "uber-contract" until it sells to a book > >publisher. To do this right, you would divide > >this contract into small peices, or sub-contracts. > >Then, as people contribute, their time is tracked > >against these components. Right now, for instance, > >you have a book-outline project which people are > >working on; it could be decided that the book-outline > >sub contract is worth ".5%" of the book ownership. > >Then, as people track their time against these > >sub-contracts, a summary (once a week) is presented > >to you (the owner of the contract) for approval > >of their hours. If approved, then the contributer > > The way this is normally done is to do a page or word count of the finished > product. Each author owns a "chapter". The editor negotiates with the > publisher and takes a cut off the top. Counting time is a bad idea IMHO. > Too much uncertainty and inequity. > > Of course in this case there is a lot of pre-existing text which makes > counting pages hard. Is there any way we can make this whole thing owned > by postgresql.org and just use the proceeds for the project? I haven't > been tracking the legal status. The first two chapters are Intro/History, like the one I wrote for the BSD magazine, and chapter 2 is using psql, which is all new. We really don't have much hand-holding stuff. Chapters 1-4 are going to be all new. The later chapters may use some existing stuff. -- Bruce Momjian | http://www.op.net/~candle maillist@candle.pha.pa.us | (610) 853-3000 + If your life is a hard drive, | 830 Blythe Avenue + Christ can be your backup. | Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania 19026