Alot of talk, especially by small time and new comics creators, in the webcomics community is about ways to help new and unknown comics get noticed. Organizations, collectives, awards, links, and diatribes against the narrow minded fandom are popular. This reader thought he would bring up another reason young and small comics have trouble.
This weekend marks the last time you'll be able to say, "A Miracle of Science -- yeah, I was following it back when it was first published." Next week, the strip -- about a pair of officers tasked with discovering, defusing and arresting scientists suffering from SRMD (Science Related Memetic Disorder, i.e., mad science) -- draws to a well-earned close after six years.
So if you have a need to be part of the hip in-crowd (whatever that means) or just really enjoy a great sci-fi story, now's the time to catch up before next week's finale.
UPDATE: TODAY'S THE LAST DAY TO ASK QUESTIONS - POST YOUR QUESTIONS FOR THE CREATORS OF BLANK LABEL COMICS IN A COMMENT BELOW.
For next month's Comixpedia magazine issue focusing on collectives we'll be conducting a community interview with Blank Label Comics. On hand to answer your questions will be BLC members: Brad J. Guigar (Evil Inc., Courting Disaster); Howard Tayler (Schlock Mercenary); Dave Kellett (Sheldon); Kristofer Straub (Starslip Crisis); Paul Southworth (Ugly Hill); Paul Taylor (Wapsi Square); Steve Troop (Melonpool); David Willis (It's Walky!, Shortpacked!); and Greg Dean (Real Life).
If you have a question for Blank Label Comics post it as a comment to this thread. On Friday, February 9th, we'll take the top ten questions and send them on to BLC for answers (which we'll post later in February).
I now have a total of 25 pages up for Draven: The Vampire Chronicle. If you've been following the story, the newest (5) pages are available here: