User talk:Clayton.Aguiar
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[edit] Drawing Board
- Hi, and welcome to Wikipedia. :) I am duplicating my response at your talk page. My biggest suggestion to you would be that you hook up with the folks at Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics, who should be able to give you an informed response to your ideas. It's a pretty active WikiProject, but be warned: its archival bot is like lightning. If your posts disappear without response, you may need to repost them. :) Good luck. --Moonriddengirl (talk) 02:40, 2 January 2008 (UTC)
- Hi. Saw your post at Talk:Comics. I would recommend you start work in your user space first and I'll be glad to give you any pointers, help and assistance. At the minute I'm not sure how you arrive at the name for the article and how it differs in scope from Webcomics. Hiding T 13:14, 2 January 2008 (UTC)
- eComics are images distributed in single files using a Comic Book Archive file format. Unlike Webcomics, they are not readable using a web browser. Quite often, they are scans of paper comics, and are commonly used to preserve comics from the 20th century that can no longer be bought in shops. Roskakori (talk) 00:25, 7 January 2008 (UTC)
- Hi, I saw you post in the ComicRack forum. I've been contributing to the Comic Book Archive file article for a while, and I do think there's a need for such an eComic article. Right now there's a lot of cluttered, redundant and outdated information about eComic related subjects available in Wikipedia, which are regularly completely reworked. A main article about it could clean this up and incorporate many of the existing smaller articles. By the way, there is already a pretty good article on eComic translations filed under Scanlation. Roskakori (talk) 00:20, 7 January 2008 (UTC)