![Fillers side effect](https://loka.nahovitsyn.com/171.jpg)
So the issue doesn't stop with whether I can make it back. On comparing to another app priced at $3.99 with same number of downloads, the returns have been much higher. One might be inclined to think Dash for iOS at $10 might be a hard sell but it has done really good. I was reading up on some devs who put out their income figures. Then there is decision on pricing the app. One could argue that ghostnote might or might have a potential for $50k but who knows? Add the fact that some gurus say paid apps are dead while you can find numerous paid ones working fine, it is just confusing. I guess that is where one needs to a fair bit of market analysis. If you can't make $50k on an app then why spend the money to have it made? > The problem isn't really the initial dollar amount, it's spending what you think you can make back on the application in a reasonable amount of time (6 months). Time learning programming is never wasted but it's just a different level we are talking about for this app. I managed to build this because we basically focused on the major challenge for Jimmy and not a lot of nice-to have stuff but ultimately not important to begin with. My best advice is make sure you have a pretty well polished idea, final (kind a) design and an interesting problem.
![ghostnote forum ghostnote forum](https://live.staticflickr.com/3311/5763586789_47354241dd_z.jpg)
#Ghostnote forum how to
I do know how to program just not well enough to even remotely begin to solve some of the things you have to solve to make this work. On top of that having to deal with MASS and the Sandbox was a frustrating experience. Its one thing to build an app that does what the framework is build for, but we are doing stuff that are kind breaking some fairly new grounds. I hired several developers most couldn't get it done and I had even talked to several developers about doing it as a split deal. It sounds simple but it's much harder than one would expect. And I won lunch for the entire office I worked for many moons ago by singing on the radio.I have been circling around this contextual idea for several years now and in fact this is just a small part of what I ultimately want to build.
![ghostnote forum ghostnote forum](http://is5.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Music6/v4/ca/f2/74/caf2740b-c016-4fa9-8a7c-ccd6ce003230/source/3000x3000sr.jpg)
That was fun I’ve won first place in a few costume contests over the years. I won $100 on Christmas Eve on a scratch off once many years ago. I don’t think fast enough and my anxiety would have me in knots.ĥ. If you could be a contestant on a game show, which one would it be? The amount of people that went home with a frying pan and a year of Rice-a-roni vs the “New Corvette” or “Complete Living room by Ethan Allen” was staggering lol and always humorous.ģ. You had 3 doors to choose your prize from lavish to lack luster. My favorite was of course picking the door. I used to love to see some woman plowing through her purse to find a toothpick or bobby pin. What was your favorite game show as a kid? It easily wins and keeps the primary spot in my kit setup, and although it’s quite valuable as snare drums go (just the piece of carbon fiber that it started from cost $1800), I can’t see myself ever putting it up for sale.ġ. I couldn’t believe I won the thing, and it’s truly a one-of-a-kind masterpiece the kind of instrument I could and would never afford to buy for myself. They had regular contests and raffles, and one of them was a drawing for a snare drum that would start as a carbon fiber shell, and then be shipped around the world to 8 different master drum-smiths, each of whom would add something toward the its completion. For a while a number of years back, I was a regular on an online forum for custom drum builders (the Ghostnote forum, now gone, sadly). That feels like my best win, but the best thing I ever won was a custom snare drum. 22 it was, and I’ve considered it a lucky number ever since.
![ghostnote forum ghostnote forum](https://i.gyazo.com/150fad259dbd881279b13dcdf21bc8d8.png)
I picked 22 for no reason, and the wheel spun. My brother let me pick the number on which he’d put our dime at the church bazaar. The first thing I ever won was a hollow plastic Snoopy coin bank when I was 4. Watched that a lot in my youth (during the Barker era), so Barker seems more ingrained or original, but I don’t really care enough to favor either one. I can see it now flying back home with $1000, my year’s supply of Alleve, and bitter memories of the worst possible categories for me. I’m pretty sure I’d be way out of my comfort zone on any show, but since my wife considers me a veritable fountain of relatively useless information, I’d say a trivia/general-knowldge question scenario applies, so Jeopardy again comes to mind. If you could be a contestant on a game show, which one would it be?.What was your favorite game show as a kid?.As for current ones, good ol’ Jeopardy still rings the bell
![ghostnote forum ghostnote forum](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C6tYrBEU0AA1im3.jpg)
Something about contestants that made no effort to actively pursue the appearance, I think. In my house, we seem to be mildly addicted to Cash Cab reruns on Game Show Network.
![Fillers side effect](https://loka.nahovitsyn.com/171.jpg)