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From YouTube: Adam Hyde - Booktype
Description
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A
B
So
to
speak
and
in
total
we
have
manuals
in
over
I
think
15
languages
in
total,
and
this
is
all
voluntary.
There's
no
unemployed
full-time,
it's
enough
for
profit
organization
and
its
run
purely
off
the
energy
of
the
people
and
the
passion
of
the
people
involved
for
free
software
and
free
documentation,
mm-hmm.
A
B
Yeah,
that's
that's,
basically
the
story
and
on
the
way,
the
platform
that
we
built
and
we
sort
of
accidentally
built
what
I
consider
to
be
a
new
paradigm
in
publishing,
which
is
AMA
online
collaborative
book
production
platform.
It's
all
open
source
and
you
can
use
it
to
produce
books
which
are
you
make
into
paper
books
or
web
pages
or
mobi
or
epub
or
whatever
you
like.
A
B
Together
with
that,
as
well
as
sort
of
building
up
a
community
over
several
years,
we
needed
rapid
development
cycles
for
documentation.
So
came
up
with
the
methodology
known
as
the
book
sprint,
where
you
write
a
book
with
a
group
of
people
in
anywhere
between
two
and
five
days
and
I've
done
about
I've
facilitated
about
40
of
these
to
date,
mmhmm.
A
B
What
we're
trying
to
do
is
come
up
with
a
and
a
new
idea
for
a
editor.
You
know
your
own
sort
of
tied
up
as
Pacific
editors
and
there's
something
some
movement
in
the
area
of
html5
editors
and
so
Kathy
and
I
have
been
talking
about
being
able
to
make
an
editor
that
allows
you
to
also
see
the
content
in
a
variety
of
design.
Context
like
see
what
it
would
look
like
in
an
ipad
and
the
kindle
and
and
book
formatted
layer.
B
A
B
B
I
mean
the
nice
thing
is
that
is
some
really
interesting:
libraries
for
dynamic
content
production,
which
will
render
well
and
what
format
a
PDF
or
print
but
are
also
supported
online,
obviously,
but
also
javascript,
is
supported
by
supported
by
some.
He
knew,
despite
our
iPad
I
books,
which
is
actually
a
browsing
engine
and
insanity,
so
it
supports
CSS
and
JavaScript
and
stuff.
B
B
The
main
thing
is
that
you've
got
to
make
you've
got
a
lower.
The
threshold
for
participation.
You've
got
to
make
it
fun.
You've
got
to
make
it
social
and
you've
got
to
put
the
time
into
not
you
have
to
have
someone
who's,
putting
the
time
into
not
creating
documentation
by
creating
a
community,
and
that's
really
critical.
I
was
early
in
the
stages
of
developing
flus
manuals.
I
was
writing
all
the
manuals
and
then
a
friend
of
mine
says
you
know
what
you've
got
to
stop.
Writing
journals.
B
You've
got
to
get
other
people
to
write
them
and,
of
course,
that's
the
that's
the
point
right
and
you
can't
get
scale
or
community.
If
you
just
do
it
all
yourself,
so
at
that
point,
I
sort
of
had
a
few
enough
documentation
together
that
it
was
interesting
to
people
and
I
started
going
around
and
presenting
this
idea
at
conferences
and
just
building
up
the
idea
and
attracting
two
people
to
it.
B
I
really
spent
a
lot
of
time
on
the
road
promoting
this
mm-hm
talking
to
people
in
all
walks
of
this
sort
of
free
culture
area
and
just
you
know,
slowly,
building
up
a
community
and
also,
at
the
same
time,
doing
it
online
so
online.
You
know
like
started.
An
email
list
started
talking
to
people
online
about
these
ideas,
encouraging
them
etc.
But
one
of
the
one
of
the
critical
pieces
of
the
jigsaw
was
books
prints
because
Brooks
prince
has
so
much
fun
and
they
produce
books
in
a
really
incredible
short
time.
So.
B
To
twelve
people,
you
can
do
it
shorter
as
well.
In
a
physical
location,
you
can
be
in
a
physical
location.
You
can
also
do
them
remotely,
but
physically
is
by
far
better
and
people
come
together.
They'll
take
holidays
to
come
and
do
these
things,
because
it's
so
much
fun.
You
know
you,
and
so
you
build
up
micro
communities
because
for
us
manuals
for
example,
as
as
a
community,
but
it's
also
a
community
of
communities
and
you've
got
to
consider
books
manuals
not
to
be
box
or
manuals,
but
to
be
communities.
B
A
B
A
community
of
people
participating
in
that
and
the
process
of
continually
maintaining
that
content
you
have
books
prints
are
very
good
way
to
do
this
because
you
bring
a
group
of
people
together.
They
have
a
lot
of
fun
together
and
the
theory
is,
although
it
doesn't
always
work
that
they
continue
to
work
with
each
other
after
they've
lived
the
books
print
now,
and
the
other
thing
is
to
stage
events
and
we're
starting
to
do
now.
Sprint
conferences,
which
is
multiple
books,
prints
happening
at
once.
In
the
same
event,
so
you
can
sort
of
like
save.