Deck Exchange Guidelines
Posted: Sun 15 May, 2005 6:27 pm
Hi Everyone,
I just made a couple of slight changes to the Guidelines document for the deck exchange. After the flurry of uploading to the exchange that we had a couple of weeks ago, things have now gone a bit quiet. This might just be co-incidence, but the slowdown happened after I uploaded the guidelines last weekend, so I thought I had better clarify things in case I have put anyone off uploading decks.
I suggested in the document that there should be a limit to the deck size of about two megs. I am worried that people might think this is because I am running out of disk space on the server or whatever. This really is not the case. In the future my Internet Service Provider will probably approach me about memory or bandwidth issues, but so far they haven't and I will worry about that when it happens.
If your deck is three or four megs, please don't let that stop you from uploading it. It is nice to have larger graphics and to be able to zoom in on an image. I just felt it was worth making people aware of the issue because the graphics on the Russian Playing Card Museum site are really quite big (six megs plus for the whole deck) and the program runs a bit slowly when you have a lot of cards out of the pack. With tools like Irfanview it is quite simple to optimise the file size for the program so we should take advantage.
I am very keen to promote the deck exchange and have it become a key incentive for people to register the program. I never actually referred to this directly (Dominatrix did obliquely in another post), and some people might not be aware of it, but thanks to some hackers there is a keygen available on the internet that lets people unlock version 5 of the program. This appeared a couple of months ago, just before I released version six. Unfortunately the affect on registrations has been dramatic - I have gone from about four a week down to about one every ten days, which is actually fewer than when I released version 1 of the program in 2002! Of course, when version 1 of the Orphalese Tarot came out there was not really any similar competition, but now I have to compete against my own version 5, which was really quite a good tarot program. My reason for promoting the deck exchange then is to get people interested in the Tarot Zone, the only part of the program that I can guarantee the security of. To get access to the Deck Exchange you have to be registered, and you have to pass through validation against my customer database each time you log in (this happens in the background, you wouldn't be aware of it). I know I probably shouldn't mention the keygen here but I think the cat is pretty much out of the bag by now. I feel it is more important to express my thoughts about this, to encourage people with the idea that by uploading decks they are supporting the program, as well as sharing the pleasure of a new deck with the rest of the group.
On the subject of the Deck Exchange Guidelines I made another slight change because I noticed something about zip files. If you are using Windows XP it actually is possible to preview the internal structure of a zip file by selecting it Explorer in the left hand pane. The contents of the zip file, including sub-folder, appears in the right-hand file pane.
Cheers!
Richard
I just made a couple of slight changes to the Guidelines document for the deck exchange. After the flurry of uploading to the exchange that we had a couple of weeks ago, things have now gone a bit quiet. This might just be co-incidence, but the slowdown happened after I uploaded the guidelines last weekend, so I thought I had better clarify things in case I have put anyone off uploading decks.
I suggested in the document that there should be a limit to the deck size of about two megs. I am worried that people might think this is because I am running out of disk space on the server or whatever. This really is not the case. In the future my Internet Service Provider will probably approach me about memory or bandwidth issues, but so far they haven't and I will worry about that when it happens.
If your deck is three or four megs, please don't let that stop you from uploading it. It is nice to have larger graphics and to be able to zoom in on an image. I just felt it was worth making people aware of the issue because the graphics on the Russian Playing Card Museum site are really quite big (six megs plus for the whole deck) and the program runs a bit slowly when you have a lot of cards out of the pack. With tools like Irfanview it is quite simple to optimise the file size for the program so we should take advantage.
I am very keen to promote the deck exchange and have it become a key incentive for people to register the program. I never actually referred to this directly (Dominatrix did obliquely in another post), and some people might not be aware of it, but thanks to some hackers there is a keygen available on the internet that lets people unlock version 5 of the program. This appeared a couple of months ago, just before I released version six. Unfortunately the affect on registrations has been dramatic - I have gone from about four a week down to about one every ten days, which is actually fewer than when I released version 1 of the program in 2002! Of course, when version 1 of the Orphalese Tarot came out there was not really any similar competition, but now I have to compete against my own version 5, which was really quite a good tarot program. My reason for promoting the deck exchange then is to get people interested in the Tarot Zone, the only part of the program that I can guarantee the security of. To get access to the Deck Exchange you have to be registered, and you have to pass through validation against my customer database each time you log in (this happens in the background, you wouldn't be aware of it). I know I probably shouldn't mention the keygen here but I think the cat is pretty much out of the bag by now. I feel it is more important to express my thoughts about this, to encourage people with the idea that by uploading decks they are supporting the program, as well as sharing the pleasure of a new deck with the rest of the group.
On the subject of the Deck Exchange Guidelines I made another slight change because I noticed something about zip files. If you are using Windows XP it actually is possible to preview the internal structure of a zip file by selecting it Explorer in the left hand pane. The contents of the zip file, including sub-folder, appears in the right-hand file pane.
Cheers!
Richard