How to read a book
Our closed beta is humming along nicely and the first quillpers seem to have a lot of fun stacking up their virtual libraries and browsing their closest library match’s libraries for new book ideas. In just one day (actually in just an hour of one day) Katja and Marcel have taken us by storm, dwarfing our libraries which we put together in the last weeks and months of our quillp development. Respect
I don’t think Henry’s resorting to stacking up high-school text books to take the lead with the largest library again will put him in safe territory for even one day against those who love reading just as much as Henry loves programming quillp.
After all those months of hard work it’s great to see that quillp seems to be catching on with the book lovers and that it’s easy to use as well, adding that many books in such a short timespan. But with every new platform there are a few bugs that still need to be sorted out so thanks for all your invaluable feedback. The hands-down lead on this front goes to Tim, sending us feedback every other minute, so quillp will be even better when we go into our open beta a few weeks from now.
And what does all of this have to do with how to read a book? Well, as the following historical document from our Norwegian friends shows even the book wasn’t as simple to use back in the days when it was new technology. So keep your feedback coming so quillp will be fun and a snap to use from the get-go - a little far-fetched bridge from the headline, I’ll admit… Have fun with this clip anyway!
Tags: beta, books, Fun, reading
Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008 at 1:22 and is filed under Announcement. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.










