The child and I would like to know, in light of this, whether you want us to keep doing our let's play series.
We have had three reasons for making it.
One, any software development project needs play testing with real users. It is easy to get so involved with code that you can't see it anymore, and having someone blunder around doing all the wrong things is essential if you want to write user-friendly software. (I could tell a dozen stories about that but will not.) We hope that showing you what a kid and a parent do in TS can help you see what sorts of issues come up that would never come up when those more familiar use it.
Two, we saw very few videos about TS on YouTube, and MC has been made popular in part by all the people playing it there, so we thought why not help to popularize it by showing it off? Admittedly our first few "episodes" have been kind of boring as we learn how to do this, but we hope to improve. If we could talk that would improve things, but the dad part of our family is pretty strongly set against the eight year old talking on YouTube, for I suppose good reasons.
Three, we just have these little snippets of time to contribute, half an hour every few days, as part of learning things. We have been learning a lot by making the let's play series, and probably we could keep going on that. The child is very interested in how people do things like make tutorials and presentations and things, so we are exploring that.
What we should do going forward depends on what you all think about goals one and two. These are the ways the first two goals could play out:
- Play testing is important, spreading the word isn't (or we are doing it too badly): we should continue the series but not make it public on YouTube, just linked from here.
- Play testing isn't important, spreading the word is: we should continue the series but either try to make it more interesting or let somebody else do it who can do it better. (We know our video editing skills are sub-par)
- Both play testing and spreading the word are important: we should keep doing what we have been doing, because even if somebody else could make better videos, I know a lot about software testing and play testing and can help with that.
- Neither are important: we should stop making this series and learn about this stuff in other ways (of which there are many).
Please tell us what you actually want, especially begla and Cervator. We don't want to waste our time on things not useful to the project, but we are also happy to continue IF it is useful. And we are open to suggestions about ways to make it more useful (including not doing it).