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Priorty
Interrupt
by Steve Ciarcia
When
Boilerplates Won't Do
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When
a niche magazine like Circuit Cellar INK promotes a message,
it's called an eccentricity. When a major trade magazine
promotes a message, it's called an industry trend. It
is often only in hindsight that a cause championed by
the minority gains due respect. Let me explain.
Like
Circuit Cellar INK, many technical magazines have
Web sites that offer supplemental materials. It's no secret.
The object is to create traffic and sell advertising.
The difference is, trade magazines are now discovering
something we've known all along.
All
magazines base their advertising charges on circulation
and audience demographics. In the case of the electronic
trade magazines, large companies pony up $12,000 per advertising
page to supposedly reach 100,000 engineering managers,
department heads, and CEOs (everyone a purchasing-decision
maker, mind you). Given that most of us who fall in one
of these categories have piles of unread trade magazines
on the corner of our desk, I suspect that real readership
is considerably less. Of course, since circulation is
based on the number sent and not the number actually read,
the mailbox continues to overflow.
The
digital realities of Web advertising throw a major wrench
in the works, however. The statistical packages from most
ISPs track the physical number of visitors to a site,
a page, and even to specific advertisements. The potential
circulation might be infinite (the whole Internet), but
the real circulation is only the record of who actually
comes to the site or a page.
With
banner ads on some of these trade magazine sites going
for $6000 per month, they have a vested interest in getting
you to their site. But, that's the rub! Searching the
Internet for relevant technical information is not the
typical activity of engineering managers, department heads,
and CEOs. Most of the Web surfers I meet aren't delegating
the tasks; they're performing the tasks. They're most
attracted to sites that offer application information
that simplifies that task.
It
takes guts to buck tradition. A specific example is the
online news and technical resource publication, EDTN
(www.edtn.com). EDTN is a joint venture between
Aspect Development Inc. and CMP Media Inc. You're probably
more familiar with CMP. In addition to their recent purchase
of BYTE, they publish EE Times, Electronic
Buyers News, Semiconductor Business, and about
40 other trade magazines. In the process of building their
Web site, EDTN came to the inevitable conclusion
that the typical trade-magazine boilerplate won't satisfy
this crowd. They have to avoid the traditional trade-magazine-formula
approach to editorial in the all-important design sections.
That's when our name came up.
Beginning
this month, Circuit Cellar INK will be providing
the editorial content for the embedded-control section
of EDTN's EE Design Online. I applaud EDTN's
boldness in the face of obvious politics. Ultimately,
the marriage of their wide audience and our real-world
content should benefit both of us. It also demonstrates
what others, like Hamilton-Hallmark which posts my editorial
each month, have known all along: Circuit Cellar INK
offers high-quality technical information.
Electronic
media changes don't stop there, however. It has always
been frustrating to me that we have considerably more
editorial than we have pages available in the magazine.
This month we inaugurate a new section on our Web site
called Design Forum. It's a subscriber bonus section that
contains new monthly articles, feature columns, and design
projects.
Each
month will contain an additional Silicon Update from Tom
Cantrell. We've always felt that one column a month hardly
covered his West Coast investigations, so now there are
two. Lessons From The Trenches is a new column by George
Martin. George and I have worked together on many projects
over the years. He's the guy I call when I need help.
Lessons From the Trenches documents some of the design
lessons he's learned the hard way. Design Forum will also
contain design hints and new feature articles. Because
we aren't limited for space, these projects will typically
contain more example listings and illustrations.
Finally,
Design Forum solves a real problem for me. When we conduct
a contest with the overwhelming success of Design98, it
results in a lot of publishable projects. We print the
winning projects in the magazine, but there are dozens
of others of equal value. As only one of the judges, my
top picks weren't necessarily always the winners. As the
publisher, however, I get a way to show my top choices
to you. PIC Abstractions is a selection of PIC projects
from our Design98 contest.
One
of the first projects is a personal favorite of mine.
It is for a 128 × 240 LCD graphing weather monitor that
displays a 48-h moving graph of pressure and temperature.
Even if you don't build one yourself, stop by and take
a look at the pictures. You'll be amazed at the sophistication
and performance of this little device.
So,
is anything really different? Our message has remained
the same through the years. The people who build all the
electronic gadgets we take for granted want a source of
reliable design information, and we have provided it.
Some may call our mission an eccentricity. I'd rather
think of it as an industry trend.

steve.ciarcia@circuitcellar.com
Published: August-1998