Published on June 12, 2003 By Stephen Lee-Woolf In WinCustomize Talk
I realise that this is likely to become a contentious thread, and will probably get me flamed, but ... here goes

I am becoming concerned at the increasing number of skins (or Icons or Cursors) that are only available after paying a free. The OD ethos has always been that you pay for the system and a worldwide band of dedicated users are sufficiently motivated to produce the skins that go with it. This has always worked well.

I fully accept that a lot of work goes into producing some skins and that the creator is fully entitled to recompense for his work (if he is a professional graphics designer), but this trend is increasing and could deter users from buying OD products in the first place. BTW I don't recall Stardock ever mentioning on it's advertising that some skins etc may incur further expenditure to acquire.

Don't get me wrong, I have purchased both the Orion and Toon XP suites because I consider them to be outstanding pieces or work so I am not bitching just because I want something for free
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on Jun 12, 2003
I understand what you mean, but like you said, the work that is sold is REALLY outstanding quality, there is no one on this site that can do themes like universe metal, toon-xp, orion icons, and there are more of them.

Those suites are of such a good quality that it costs lots of time, and there are people here who made their job of it.
on Jun 12, 2003
A tip of the fedora to you Styl skinner. Some things are just so good that a ransom has to be paid to get them. And it's a small payment for a job well done. (Crab smiley and a winky here).
on Jun 12, 2003
Hey, I wasn't asking
on Jun 12, 2003
Well there are vastly more skins and entire suites available here and elsewhere for free than there are for sale. And of significant quality too. Those that are for sale provide a bit of support for the skinners and the Stardock ones also help support the site here. It really doesn't look to me that there's a significant trend that will reduce the availability of work provided at no cost. And there's some fantastic stuff available for free. Frankly, almost all of my favorite skins are free. I do, however, occasionally buy some to help support the site and skinners. But that's purely one's choice. Not because viable free alternatives aren't available.






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on Jun 12, 2003
Just take a look at Mike's 'Avenger' and Hippy's 'Prometheus'. That could easily have been purchasing suites (with some more skins) and they would have been sold like hell. But they are giving them away for free. And Pixtudio is still doing many outstanding free skins also. I really don't see the point.
on Jun 12, 2003
If the people producing those skins only produced skins for pay I would agree with you. But they don't. They continually produce extremely high quality skins for free as well. Let's imagine the following scenarios:

Scenario 1:

Those skinners produce skins for free only. They find that they can't afford the luxury of having a computer/net connection. They stop skinning or cut back drastically.

Result: Everyone loses.

Scenario 2:

Those skinners get a small amount of money ($6 - 10) from those who like their skins enough to be willing to pay for them. They pay for their net connection, software upgrades (software upgrades), hardware with this and as a result don't have to keep trying to work extra hours to make ends meet.

Result: They are still producing quality skins which may be higher quality than before as they have been able to skin for longer than previously, can afford the best tools for the job, have a PC capable of rendering complex images in half the time (freeing up the PC for other use quicker).

Since I started skinning I have bought the following mainly for skinning (rough prices). NOTE: I had no interest in computer graphics before coming across Windowblinds:

1 15 inch TFT monitor with DVI/VGA inputs: £400
Windows 2000 : £40 (student discounts are good!) Bought this mainly so I could use WindowFX.
Windows XP: £120
PSP 6 : £80
PSP 7 upgrade: £40
Photoshop: £300
1GB DDR - £500 - Had 512 SDRAM which moved to the other PC
Coreldraw 11: £300
Extra PC: £200 (used bits and pieces I salvaged from an old PC)

Total: £1980 without all the skinning apps and upgrades and premium skins added on. Yes a lot of those are useful for other things so I'll drop the total by a quarter.

TOTAL = £1485

I am in the fortunate position of being able to do a job that I enjoy which pays enough for me to keep doing my hobby (skinning, a bit of programming and beta testing desktop customisation stuff).

Do I buy every premium skin? No. I buy the ones I like and will use and skip the ones that I don't.
on Jun 12, 2003
I do understand what you're saying Stephen, but I also think it's a somewhat weak argument. Just because Object Desktop is an all-in-one purchase, doesn't mean that the skins and themes for the contained applications should also be included.

The majority of these skins are created by non-Stardock people who give up their free time to give something for free to the general public out of the kindness of their hearts.

Those skinners who then release the occassional paid-for skin collection are simply hoping to get something back from that public, even if it means selling a particular skin for the low price of $10 (which incidentally is the average price of a single computer games magazine in this country, which is something you'd get far less use out of).

As I said in another thread, it's not so much about paying a small amount for a particular theme, but more about paying a small amount to support the entire workload that goes into creating all of that author's skins, which are generally free to download. The best comparison I could make is when you make a donation in a charity box and they give you a pretty little sticker or badge in return. You're not buying the sticker, but rather supporting the work that charity does as a whole. The skin you're paying for is almost like a little freebie as an incentive for donating some money to the skinner.
on Jun 12, 2003
I've been considering putting a PayPal 'donate' button on my site for a while now, in the hopes of getting a little money back for the skinning work I've done in the past. However, I think I'm far less likely to get any money that way than I would be to release a premium suite to sell.

I don't see the premium suites going away any time soon, but rather increasing in number. Just so long as the balance is struck between free and paid-for skins, I think things will continue to work just fine. It wouldn't matter how many hundreds of high-quality skins a particular skinner made available for free though, as they'd still get all the unpleasant comments about how that one premium skin they released should be free too.
on Jun 12, 2003
Skins are still free. Like the posters said above there are still good ones available. You even bought some commercial ones yourself. I think we can see more commercial skins in the future. That is not bad at all. It will be part of the professionalization of a craft that started as a hobby. We also see skinners doing jobs for large companies that use skins to promote their products. That's not bad either. Skinning is finally getting recognized.

BTW I don't recall Stardock ever mentioning on it's advertising that some skins etc may incur further expenditure to acquire.

It is much like a CD player (the skinning software) and the CD itself (the skin). A handfull of skins are not for free. 99.9% of the skins are for free. I would consider your argument if most good skins require payment, but even then Stardock will just be making software to apply skins. Maybe we have an argument if most skins were sold by Stardock. In that case maybe the skinning software should be free. I don't see Stardock moving into that bussiness now or anytime in the near future.

[Message Edited]
on Jun 12, 2003
While I can see a side of Stephen's argument, the bit that annoys me is the way you put it across as you bought OD products, and now other people are required to make the skins.
I bought a car, I don't expect other people to drive me around in it.

On the premium skin matter, Mike and I at Skinplant made 17 or so skins for our first premium suite.
If we hadn't been making it to sell, we would have probably made 5 or 6 skins, and spent about a 3rd the time on it.(I think we spent about just over 2 months in total on Solara)
We sold it for 9.25
BMT Micro get 1.25 from that, and we split the rest 4 each.
Now convert that to UK where I am, that was about £1.70 per sale.
Skinplant is my only source of income right now as I'm unemployed, so when my cheque comes in every month, it goes right in the bank to bank, basically to keep me living.
Now, there's no way I'm gonna give up my only source of income, so people can get a freebie for a program that makes no guarantees of that. They should appreciate the free skins, and not take them for granted.
on Jun 12, 2003
Hippy.....rather ....you bought the car, but to make use of it you still really have to buy petrol for it....a better analogy...
on Jun 12, 2003
I buy them all (OD, premium suites, pixtudio suites, icons, etc...) and use none of them. I do it so that this site can continue to function (bandwidth-wise) and to support the extremely talented skinners represented here and elsewhere. In fact, if Paypal wasn't the only donation mechanism used by some of the skinners (I hate paypal, they've ripped me off more than once) - specifically Nicholas (sysmetrix) - use, I would donate to them as well.

I consider it an investment in the future of skinning.



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on Jun 12, 2003
Don't see the problem really. There's plenty of fish in the sea.

And if people think that just because they bought app X they can have all the skins for free, they don't quite understand how thinks work.
on Jun 12, 2003
I'm all for authors being able to sell their skins, icons, etc.

One problem is that some of the pay suites are lower quality than the free stuff.

A second problem is that I feel the price point is too high. I think that if the price point was lower, you would make up in volume what you lose in dollers per individual sale. The people who would buy ths suites to support the community and the authors will buy anyway, and a micro-price such as $1 for a skin would probably attract a huge number of casual users who would never pay $10 for a skin. There's no need to just take my word for this, run an experiment for one month. Let the numbers decide the future of the store. This is what real world stores do, they adjust prices experimentally until they find the price point in which they are getting the most profit (or in this case, the most income).

As for the suite that was recently released. You could probably get more sales if you offered both the full 4 skin pack, and sold each individual skin at a lower price.
on Jun 12, 2003
Joshua, one of the realities of internet commerce is certain fixed charges. If an artist or a site uses a "high quality store" to handle purchases there are certain fixed transaction fees. One can try to lower the charges using other stores, but then you run the risk of people complaining of overcharges. You can't accept a $1 payment if you get charged $.99 per transaction.



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