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The rise of ComicPress as a comics CMS and its requirement that every page be attached to a corresponding blog entry (I think, it's a while since I played with it) is not necessarily a good thing; I don't want to read a comic book with running commentary beneath every page about how this is foreshadowing something, how the production of this page went haywire, or whatever. It's like having the artist sitting there watching you read it over your shoulder.
After going through just nine pages of a comic that did this I want to say "Shut up and let your art speak for itself!".
There's a place for this sort of thing - look at the detailed endnotes in a collection of Finder - but I don't think it's right there beneath every single page.
also, ComicPress now has a WP plugin that claims to make uploading easier; perhaps I will take a look at it. My comic-scheduling extensions to the gallery package I use for my site are pretty functional, though. And it doesn't make me name my images by date like CP did last I looked.
After going through just nine pages of a comic that did this I want to say "Shut up and let your art speak for itself!".
There's a place for this sort of thing - look at the detailed endnotes in a collection of Finder - but I don't think it's right there beneath every single page.
also, ComicPress now has a WP plugin that claims to make uploading easier; perhaps I will take a look at it. My comic-scheduling extensions to the gallery package I use for my site are pretty functional, though. And it doesn't make me name my images by date like CP did last I looked.