15 October 2012 @ 04:17 pm
Creative Support Group - The Beta Edition  
I’ve been on both sides of the writer-beta relationship and both come with lots of questions. I thought maybe we could have some discussion :)

> Finding a beta: always awkward. Do you leave a message on your own journal or on a community and hope that someone’s interested? Is it too cheeky to send someone a private message asking them? Is there beta etiquette?

(I noticed that a fair amount of people said on the Secret Santa post that they would be happy to beta. If there are people on the comm who beta, what would you think about maybe setting up a kind of beta directory for writers looking for betas?)

> Being a beta: has it’s own worries. How harsh do writers want you to be? How thorough? What kind of help are they looking for? What kind of help do betas offer?

> Keeping a beta: is there an etiquette on how many times you can ask someone to look over the same fic? Is there etiquette for how long a beta can take to look it over? Can you have more than one beta at a time? If one beta says one thing and the other something different what do you do? Do you introduce them to each other? If you need a beta again in the future do you have to start all over again or can you email the same beta and ask, ‘um, remember me?’

I’m guessing a lot of this is personal and that there are a lot of different views, and that I’ve missed a lot of questions, so bring on the discussion! And if you’re looking for a beta this could be a good place to start :)
 
 
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inkvoices: work crash[personal profile] inkvoices on October 15th, 2012 06:24 pm (UTC)
I've been dredging my brain trying to figure out why I think that it's too spaces and the only thing I can come up with is that when I learnt to write, as in handwritten writing, we were taught to leave a bigger gap after the full stop than between words. Maybe that's where I've carried it on from? It's how I've always typed academic work and office work things as well though. Bah.
[identity profile] shenshen77.livejournal.com on October 15th, 2012 06:49 pm (UTC)
That sound like a reasonable enough explanation. I don't think most people would mind, I am just a little OCD with spaces and grammar and such *grins*
http://lar_laughs.livejournal.com/[identity profile] lar_laughs.livejournal.com on October 15th, 2012 07:28 pm (UTC)
When I took typing (as in on a typewriter, dear things) it was two spaced. It was changed when computers came along because the spacing is different or something very nearly like that.
[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/_samalander/ on October 16th, 2012 12:44 am (UTC)
I'ma geek but - it actually goes back to the really early forms of typesetting, when they used different blocks, and carried over to typewriters. It's mostly been phased out with computers, but there are proponents of both ways. I don't think it matters, so long as you're consistent.
[identity profile] themadramblings.livejournal.com on October 16th, 2012 11:17 am (UTC)
I was reading about this recently and it had to do with the width of each letter being the same so that the eye could only discern the change in sentence by double spacing.

This (http://www.shaunakelly.com/word/concepts/rules_onespace.html) explains it better than me.
inkvoices: avengers:C/N always hug[personal profile] inkvoices on October 16th, 2012 08:04 pm (UTC)
Interesting! Thank you :D
inkvoices: avengers:f**king stark[personal profile] inkvoices on October 16th, 2012 08:05 pm (UTC)
I can be consistent! And I can be consistently wrong :D
scribblemyname: erudite[personal profile] scribblemyname on April 14th, 2014 08:00 pm (UTC)
It's a holdover from typewriters and monospaced fonts where it aided readability just like paragraph indents.

With computers and font choices, two spaces are just not necessary. I started grammar right when the change was being formalized.