John Fairbairn wrote:Sample pages are useful, too. Sensei's Library has occasionally been good in this respect, but in my view SL shoots itself in the foot with its twee, pseudo-objective language and also with its strange obsession (sometimes replicated here) for posting errata pages. I really do fail to understand what goes through the minds of people who post things like "a comma is missing between X and Y on page Z", as if they were the only people ever to be capable of spotting such an error, yet never manage to say anything positive about a book that must have engaged their attention massively for them to spot the hiccups. (I don't say don't point out errors - but a more fruitful way is just to pass them to the author or publisher).
Ho hum. I'm the major guilty party that this discusses.
I tried hard to make the errata pages sub-pages from the main page about the book. I tried to make the errata link from the book page as small as possible. The book I first did this for was 'Making Good Shape', which I think is one of the best Go books in English. My copy was very well worn out before I replaced it with a copy of the 2nd edition, which is still in pretty good condition. To buy a 2nd copy of the same book is a comment on how much I liked the book. And yet your comment "a comma is missing between X and Y on page Z" is not just humour, but a pretty accurate description of some of the typographical errors. Well I have actually communicated with the author on this subject, and unfortunately the 2nd edition was greatly improved, but still had many of the same kind of jarring errors, mainly of the type where black and white are mixed up.
So why bother? Well lets examine the alternative. I could start a long correspondence with each publisher, where I send a list of the things I found and they take the time to send a polite but carefully not too engaging thank-you, with the addition that many have also been been found by themselves after printing, and by other readers kind enough to write in. Then on the next reading I find some more and write another letter to the publisher. At this point they start to wonder if there will ever be a way to phrase a letter to stop this annoying, but well-meaning individual, from bothering them.
So now lets think of what is particularly special about a wiki. Anyone can edit it. So anyone who wishes to can co-operate, and anyone who is not interested can just ignore it. So I thought it was quite suitable for listing errata, because I wouldn't have to do all the work. I would just add what I found, other people could add stuff they found and nobody repeats effort. The publisher just ignores it until he is thinking of doing a re-print and has a quick look then. I guess it takes less than a day for the publisher to incorporate the changes he wishes to, and just ignore the ones he disagrees with.
I included the small stuff as well as the large stuff because of a couple of problems:
1. Where is the border between large & small?
2. I would see a mistake and think 'Didn't I see this before?'.
If a publisher is re-printing, it is as easy to fix the small stuff as to fix the large stuff, all at the same time. Well as long as someone has pointed it out, because if it was so obvious, the publisher would never have allowed the mistake to appear in the first place.
I am not a strong writer or a strong player, so I find writing reviews hard, even though I also think I should try harder. You are right that there should be more reviews on SL.
So, I meant well, I tried to do it in a way that didn't dominate the book page, but it looks like I caused offence anyway. Sorry.