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Photos and diagrams
Is it just me or does anyone else find the photos in the new 7th edition to be fuzzier and less clear than those in the 6th?
The new computer drawn diagrams such as those showing the Impact Interval (2-C) and The Flail (2-K) are much clearer though. |
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Yep - diagrams are much improved, photos not as clear
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I don't get it...
My 7th edition has color photographs of superb quality. Amazing how they have stood the test of time.
I also just love the enclosed DVD with all of Homers masters classes plus the audio. I also love that I can download the master classes audio to my iPod from the Home Office site. The only thing that bugs me is that I am just kidding. |
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They are either lacking in vision, funds or both. |
Pictures
Some updated pictures would probably do wonders for TGM. Maybe some copyrite laws prevent them from changing to more updated pictures.
Non- TGMers would probably be much more receptive to the TGM Book with some dynamic, real action pictures of all the motion parts of the Strokes, rather than the posed pictures that have served so well for all these years. Maybe a separate insert of some kind could be done? |
Great post lagster. To be perfectly honest, 4 years ago the stills really turned me away from the book, and the fact that I had trouble immediately comprehending it (which was not something I associated with a golf instruction book).
Matt |
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Uh, let me add that this post is meant to be light hearted in intent. |
The Life of a Book
I've done some investigation on how to publish a book for Yoda and learned a few things that probably apply to The Golfing Machine.
The Golfing Machine is, and has always been self published. Meaning only Homer, and now the head office has any rights to the book. They are fully responsible for every aspect of the books creation, marketing, promotion, and channels of distribution. On the positive side, Joe and Co. have complete control over the look/feel/content/rights and shelf life of the book. On the negative side, the book is entirely self funded, not promoted by industry resources, not picked up by major retailers, and lacks professional inputs. But, once you get a publisher involved, you sell your rights to the book to them. TGM would never survive with your basic NY publishers. The volumes are too low to make it after the first introduction to the market. Most books have a shelf life of one year. The test of a books success is whether or not it's still in demand after a year. If not, it's replaced by the next new thing. In sports books, Harvey Penicks Little Red Book is the most successful...ever. Bagger |
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