Update on the Next Book

Progress happens on Windows Phone Book, but I want to do more

Four months ago I wrote about the plans for writing my next book, which is about Windows Phone 8 and currently called Windows Phone Book. Since then, I’ve made a bit of progress, though not as much as I’d expected. So I’d like to provide an update on the book and how I see things changing going forward.

If you’re not familiar with these plans, I discussed them in The Next Book, and I’ve been writing about the book, and posting in-progress and first draft chapters, to Windows Phone Book since then. Long story short, the most satisfying stuff I write falls into the explanatory/how-to category. But paradoxically, writing books—which is pretty much just that kind of writing, has always been stressful and awful. So I wanted to see whether I could achieve the good without the bad.

Turns out, I can. But only if I write really slowly. In four months, I’ve written only four chapters of what is now a 20 chapter book. Granted, I got bogged down by the whole Windows 8/Surface/Windows Phone 8/BUILD travel extravaganza and the SuperSite relaunch right in the middle of that. But I’ve come to understand one of the primary benefits of a traditional publishing company is that they literally hire people whose primary responsibility is to harangue you into writing on schedule. (The other benefit involves actually getting paid, but I suspect that will iron out eventually.)

Anyway. After writing three of those four chapters at glacial speeds, I wrote the fourth in about a week, which was my goal at the very beginning: A chapter a week. And while that’s likely not sustainable, I definitely want this thing to be done by the spring. The issue is that the first chapters are too long, too comprehensive. So I’m going to lighten it up. No one is looking for a 1000 page book here.

Which is the ultimate failure of this project, really: What I should have done is taken on smaller topics first. A side-goal of the next book was to examine different ways of publishing. What I’m doing on Windows Phone Book is publishing partial chapters as I write, and then first draft chapters, in PDF format. Lately, I’ve been assembling the incomplete chapters into a Book PDF document as well, to get an idea what the entire thing looks like.

This is fine for what it is, but I still want to look at other ways of getting content out to readers. And this would have been easier with smaller, “Kindle Singles”-type mini books. I will complete Windows Phone Book. But I wish I had started with something smaller.

Since I didn’t, however, I’m looking at shorter topics that could be made into shorter books. One thing that occurred to me was that certain article series I’ve written for this site this year—like Outlook.com Tips, Windows Server 2012 Essentials Tips, Windows 8 Tips, Windows Phone 8 Tips, and so on—would make for nice little books. Of course, I don’t own this content, Penton does, so I need to be careful about that, or at least ask about it. But I’m curious how this type of content could be collected together and published in different forms.

I’ve also started writing a mini-book that I’ve not published about Amazon Cloud Player. (It’s short, about 12 pages long now, with figures, or about 2600 words.) I have notions about turning it into a broader book about consumer oriented Amazon e-services (including things like Amazon MP3, Instant Videos, Audible, Kindle, and so on), or just publishing little one-offs. Obviously, that particular mini book would be ideal for Kindle. We’ll see.

I’m also interested in creating apps. I think Windows Phone Book would make for a pretty obvious and straightforward native app on Windows Phone 8, for example. There are all kinds of ways to get content out there.

I will also push future (e)books through this site and not a dedicated web site. It’s too hard managing multiple sites and the engagement here is through the roof whereas WindowsPhoneBook.com is pretty quiet. I didn’t intend to develop this thing in a vacuum and had hoped that some form of interaction would put it over the top. I suspect that could happen more readily here on the SuperSite.

I’ll keep plugging away on Windows Phone Book and try to get it done more quickly. But I really do want to work on smaller side books, too, so I’m curious what readers might find most valuable. Maybe Outlook.com? I don’t know.

What do you want?

Discuss this Article 17

VikramMohan
on Dec 18, 2012

Ecosystems.
The pluses and minuses of each. How to use a particular ecosystem that you are invested in from a competing device (say Microsoft web services from iOS). How to migrate ecosystems....you get the idea.

markuslaff
on Dec 18, 2012

+1

I like the broader ecosystem idea.

davdaarn
on Dec 18, 2012

Something short about Outlook.com would be great, or maybe a how-to leave Google services for Microsoft ones (but I cant imagine ever leaving chrome). I'm in the process of switching from gmail to outlook. I'd like to make the switch a permanent one but their are some features in gmail that I've gotten used to using that I cant seem to find with outlook, like Google talk, some of the labs and the gmail filing hierarchy.

pthurrott
on Dec 18, 2012

Yeah, was thinking a Gmail -> Outlook.com switching guide wouldn't be a bad idea.

cornholio
on Dec 18, 2012

Any idea when the Amazon Cloud Player book (and/or related Amazon services) will be made available? Sounds very interesting.

abw1987
on Dec 18, 2012

I'll echo the previous two comments (ecosystems and Outlook.com).

I've been thinking of switching from Gmail to Outlook.com, but the process seems pretty insurmountable given the number of online accounts and contacts I have tied to my Gmail account. Plus, the only IM client I use is the Gmail Chat feature, so I'd be losing that capability unless all of my contacts switched over to Outlook.com as well. This ties back to the ecosystems topic.

pickronk
on Dec 18, 2012

Also on the outlook.com topic, you might be able to cover how to switch from a Hotmail account to an outlook.com account without losing your Windows phone in the process. I was warned about this when I started to try and convert and decided to stop. I like the idea of short help guides that perhaps has micro-cost associated with it. So for example the Outlook.com would cost like $4.99 - depending on topics covered to help users. Just a thought

JeffFattic
on Dec 18, 2012

What about publishing the content as Windows Store app? Then readers could follow the how-to's without app switching on the phone. It could even be an interactive app that talked to the phone and other relevant services.
If there's interest, let's talk.

adamyedlin
on Dec 18, 2012

I can't tell you how a native Windows Phone app based on your Windows Phone book would be instrumental in advancing the platform. I am a retail consultant with Sprint (Basically I sell the phones) and I was an early adopter of Windows Phone with the HTC Arrive. They did not sell well. I sold plenty of them when we still carried it, and not one of them came back, and the reason for that, is because I KNEW the platform, I could show people how to do things, and explain why it was a better experience than Android and iOS. My fellow sales reps could not say the same, they had no idea how to use it, or how to sell it. When Sprint FINALLY gets a WP8, I will continue to be an advocate for the platform and having something I could put on people's phones for them so they have a one stop shop for questions would seriously help in avoiding returns and exchanges for other platforms. It will assure people of their purchase, and they will know how to take full advantage of their new phone. At the very least, if you had the ability to have it display in such a way as the Supersite on mobile browsers, that would go a long way as well!

BillG
on Dec 18, 2012

The switching guide might draw interest now that gMail users have been googlized...

johnwbaxter
on Dec 18, 2012

You are welcome to hire me to harangue to write to schedule. ;-)

Seriously, I've failed to do my part with Windows Phone Book (reading and commenting). But since I'm on Windows Phone 7.5 (and 7.8 sometime this decade), I can't be nearly as much help as others.

The Kindle Single path sounds interesting. I've even bought one of those (Jeff Jarvis' Gutenberg the Geek).

--John

pthurrott
on Dec 18, 2012

Thanks guys.

Mobile app should be straightforward for WP8.

I can upload the Amazon Cloud Player thing anytime. It's almost there. Not sure it's really that useful.

Regarding future topics, obviously it has to be something I care about. But no worries on contributions, it's certainly no requirement.

Wol
on Dec 18, 2012

I would rather read small focused books.

So many computer books try to cover too much .

Mini-books - yes! :)

JVarde
on Dec 19, 2012

Where can I find copies of published drafts of of the first few chapters? I'm thinking about the HTC 8X, and I'd love some sort of instructions, as I'm new to the smartphone world.

rmlounsbury
on Dec 19, 2012

Personally, I'm in the process of moving most my cloud services (music, video, data, email, etc...) over to Microsoft from many different services. I'm very interested in the book you mentioned about Amazon e-services. I like platform agnostic options so I'm not stuck with one particular platform. Coming in closely behind the Amazon book are Outlook.com and Windows Phone.

jasonhutch
on Dec 20, 2012

I would love to see some articles about using your Xbox 360, the Microsoft ecosystem, Windows 8 devices, Windows Phone's, and other hardware to create an integrated home media network.

I have started a simple network in my own home but would love to read your thoughts about Microsoft's software, hardware and ecosystem in regard to this topic.

devnull
on Dec 22, 2012

The beauty of outlook.com isn't just in activesync, but the connected services like live domains, fast profile switching/single sign on for claims-services, name aliasing, and so-on.

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