CTE Videos Of The Day - #25 & #26

Just wondering why your posting these videos on here.

Maybe my thinking is haywire but I thought this was the Aiming Forum and the Aiming videos would be the place to put them instead of one of the other forums. Nobody is being forced to watch them if they so wish.

Are they gonna lead into the truth series? Is the book about to get released?

These videos have been in existence for a while but many don't know how to find them nor have seen them. The Truth Series will stand on it's own but be in addition to these. Regarding the book...I honestly don't have that information.
It still revolves around the publishing company which is where all the material sits.

With this coronavirus crap shutting down all types of businesses in the US, I would guess there hasn't been much work done there as well as everywhere else.

They'll crank it back up when it's safe to do so.
 
These videos have been in existence for a while but many don't know how to find them nor have seen them. The Truth Series will stand on it's own but be in addition to these. Regarding the book...I honestly don't have that information.
It still revolves around the publishing company which is where all the material sits.

With this coronavirus crap shutting down all types of businesses in the US, I would guess there hasn't been much work done there as well as everywhere else.

They'll crank it back up when it's safe to do so.

I think your thinking is a little haywire but its understandable..we're a little different on here..lol

Since the videos are available just thought they was leading into something else.
 
I'm interested in how this book publishing thing actually works. As I understand it Stan has made a deal with a publishing company but maybe I'm mistaken. What exactly are the benefits of that, as opposed to self publishing? I understand that the book may be more widely available, normally, when actually published, but this is a rather niche subject matter and I wouldn't think that would be to important of a consideration.

I would assume that Mr. Shuffet intends to promote and sell this himself, so why not cut out the middle man in this and just sell copies directly? With Amazon and other E-book outlets the selling of self published works is easier than ever before. That may cut down on the time before the book gets published as well as maybe earn more money for him directly. If Amazon gets too greedy, he could always just sell from his own website, and maybe advertise on Youtube a bit.

And who is doing the illustrations? Are they going to be photos or diagrams or drawings, or a combination of all of them? Is he going with a paperback for the physical copies, ring bound or leather bound?
 
I'm interested in how this book publishing thing actually works. As I understand it Stan has made a deal with a publishing company but maybe I'm mistaken. What exactly are the benefits of that, as opposed to self publishing? I understand that the book may be more widely available, normally, when actually published, but this is a rather niche subject matter and I wouldn't think that would be to important of a consideration.

I would assume that Mr. Shuffet intends to promote and sell this himself, so why not cut out the middle man in this and just sell copies directly? With Amazon and other E-book outlets the selling of self published works is easier than ever before. That may cut down on the time before the book gets published as well as maybe earn more money for him directly. If Amazon gets too greedy, he could always just sell from his own website, and maybe advertise on Youtube a bit.

And who is doing the illustrations? Are they going to be photos or diagrams or drawings, or a combination of all of them? Is he going with a paperback for the physical copies, ring bound or leather bound?

Would YOU know what to do to put a book together with pictures, illustrations, editing, layout and design and all the rest that you mentioned above along with more?

If the answer is NO, he doesn't either.
 
And who is doing the illustrations? Are they going to be photos or diagrams or drawings, or a combination of all of them? Is he going with a paperback for the physical copies, ring bound or leather bound?

Stan expects the book to be put into the library of congress, or something like that. He wants to be sure future generations won't miss out on all the knowledge that he has unearthed. You could play for 500 years and not figure out what he has, I think is how he puts it. He's leaning toward leather bound with gold leaf from the sound of it -- a work worthy of a Medieval monastery.

All I know is he's been saying that the book is in the "design" process at the publisher and he has nothing to do with it and has no updates. That's been the status since I think around 2018.

I've been waiting for excuses as to why the book isn't out. First is the publisher is holding it up in the design process. Number two is the corona virus. Maybe number three will be an asteroid...
 
I think your thinking is a little haywire but its understandable..we're a little different on here..lol

Since the videos are available just thought they was leading into something else.

Putting these videos up was my idea, not Stan. The videos are what they are and could help those who look for different information and ways of playing BEFORE the TS and book comes out. No other motive.
 
Would YOU know what to do to put a book together with pictures, illustrations, editing, layout and design and all the rest that you mentioned above along with more?

If the answer is NO, he doesn't either.

It's really not that hard to do, and really, really not hard for a publisher to do. Something is most definitely wrong with this book release. When projects are a green light they have a certain momentum and things get done. They don't drag on year after year.

It wouldn't be hard for Stan to call his "publisher" and get an update, like why it takes over a year (or two?) to "design" a book that is in electronic form. I'm sure the fans who were wetting themselves over this book back in 2017 would appreciate a real update (and deserve one).

Go ahead and attack, Spider.
 
I'm interested in how this book publishing thing actually works. As I understand it Stan has made a deal with a publishing company but maybe I'm mistaken. What exactly are the benefits of that, as opposed to self publishing? I understand that the book may be more widely available, normally, when actually published, but this is a rather niche subject matter and I wouldn't think that would be to important of a consideration.

I would assume that Mr. Shuffet intends to promote and sell this himself, so why not cut out the middle man in this and just sell copies directly? With Amazon and other E-book outlets the selling of self published works is easier than ever before. That may cut down on the time before the book gets published as well as maybe earn more money for him directly. If Amazon gets too greedy, he could always just sell from his own website, and maybe advertise on Youtube a bit.

And who is doing the illustrations? Are they going to be photos or diagrams or drawings, or a combination of all of them? Is he going with a paperback for the physical copies, ring bound or leather bound?


When I mentioned the benefits of self publishing to Stan a couple of years ago, he said he wanted a quality book, a professional product that would be around forever, a book that would be listed in the Library of Congress, etc... He belittled self publishing, despite the fact that quality and "professional" books are self-published every day, made available all around the world, as well as entered into the Library of Congress.

Of course, their are differences between traditional publishing and self publishing. The main difference is there is no middle man, no $$$$ spent to pay a publisher to actually publish your book. With self-publishing there is no garage or room full of books that you had to "purchase" from your puplisher only to have to then sell them yourself.

With that said, I respect Stan's passion and pursuit with wanting to leave a legacy. He did mention Mark Wilson's book, Play Great Pool, as an example. And that's a very nice book. But the same quality is also something that is very possible (for those who can do it) with self-publish. It's easier, though unbelievably expensive, to simply pay a traditional publisher to do it for you. I mean, it takes a lot of time to write the text and provide illustrations for a book. That's the hardest work, and Stan and his family have already done that. So if he has the money and chooses to pay someone else to assemble and format the work and then print a few hundred or a couple of thousand copies, that's his choice. It's time consuming work, so I understand the benefit of passing that onto someone more equipped to do it.
 
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It's really not that hard to do, and really, really not hard for a publisher to do. Something is most definitely wrong with this book release. When projects are a green light they have a certain momentum and things get done. They don't drag on year after year.

It wouldn't be hard for Stan to call his "publisher" and get an update, like why it takes over a year (or two?) to "design" a book that is in electronic form. I'm sure the fans who were wetting themselves over this book back in 2017 would appreciate a real update (and deserve one).

Go ahead and attack, Spider.

Sounds like you're a real expert on book publishing as well as an expert on everything else pool related. You certainly don't know how to keep your nose in your own business though.

How long do you think it took your most revered book to go from it's inception to finished product for sale? I'm talking about Mark Wilson's book.

Lay it on me, Brainiac.
 
#25 - 5 Line Quarters System (17)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EJwNqLnEwgE&list=UUW8lTFYIYGN2AjHKN23M-RQ&index=18&t=75s
#26 - Three Quarters Fractional Alignment Contrast (15)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lrs0aWd9TD4&list=UUW8lTFYIYGN2AjHKN23M-RQ&index=15
All for free. Take advantage of it and learn.
Good work SpiderMan.
I was not aware that Stan had ever taught a fractional system of aiming. (For me, the old reliable CTE works just fine and I need no experimenting to cloud my concentration.) I used, with marginal results, that hackneyed Mosconi fraction method from his red book for decades....just a waste of time (especially since he didn't write the thing anyway)
Stan's method is certainly superior to the failed policies of the dizzy 'poolology' system where you find a number, divide the number by another number, and that gives you some kind of fraction on the object ball for shooting. I suppose that excites the scientist types with abilities to see a millimeter of an inch, but for a simple old truck driver like me, it is too complex to be workable in a match where you have to win.
As I said to you previously, I like to say to those poolology guys....."you better get a new book, daddy, that one ain't working".
Regards,
P.L.
 
When I mentioned the benefits of self publishing to Stan a couple of years ago, he said he wanted a quality book, a professional product that would be around forever, a book that would be listed in the Library of Congress, etc... He belittled self publishing, despite the fact that quality and "professional" books are self-published every day, made available all around the world, as well as entered into the Library of Congress.

Of course, their are differences between traditional publishing and self publishing. The main difference is there is no middle man, no $$$$ spent to pay a publisher to actually publish your book. With self-publishing there is no garage or room full of books that you had to "purchase" from your puplisher only to have to then sell them yourself.

With that said, I respect Stan's passion and pursuit with wanting to leave a legacy. He did mention Mark Wilson's book, Play Great Pool, as an example. And that's a very nice book. But it's also something that is very possible (for those who can do it) to self-publish a nice collectable book of such quality. It's easier, unbelievably expensive, to simply pay a traditional publisher to do it for. I mean, it takes a lot of time to write to text and provide illustrations. That's the hardest work, and Stan and his family have already done that. So if he has the money and chooses to pay someone else to assemble and format the work and then print a few hundred or a couple of thousand copies, that's his choice. It's time consuming work, so I understand the benefit of passing that onto someone more equipped to do it.

It's interesting to get your perspective on this. Obviously Stan has great plans for his book, and it is a daunting task to assemble a big work like this. Personally, if I had a passion product such as this, my instincts would be to at least try to put something together myself, in order to control as many aspects as possible of the product. Now, if I did that, and the feedback from proof readers was negative, then I'd obviously relinquish control, but I'd hesitate to do so.

If it is true, like Dan White says, that Mr. Shuffets main goal is to create a legacy, then I'd say that presentation may not be quite as important as getting the actual product out. But my intention was not to knock Mr. Shuffet in any way. I'm just curious, as are many on here, why this has taken so long, and why the marketing seems to ramp up and then suddenly die down, over and over. It's very odd.
 
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When I mentioned the benefits of self publishing to Stan a couple of years ago, he said he wanted a quality book, a professional product that would be around forever, a book that would be listed in the Library of Congress, etc... He belittled self publishing, despite the fact that quality and "professional" books are self-published every day, made available all around the world, as well as entered into the Library of Congress.

Of course, their are differences between traditional publishing and self publishing. The main difference is there is no middle man, no $$$$ spent to pay a publisher to actually publish your book. With self-publishing there is no garage or room full of books that you had to "purchase" from your puplisher only to have to then sell them yourself.

With that said, I respect Stan's passion and pursuit with wanting to leave a legacy. He did mention Mark Wilson's book, Play Great Pool, as an example. And that's a very nice book. But the same quality is also something that is very possible (for those who can do it) with self-publish. It's easier, though unbelievably expensive, to simply pay a traditional publisher to do it for you. I mean, it takes a lot of time to write the text and provide illustrations for a book. That's the hardest work, and Stan and his family have already done that. So if he has the money and chooses to pay someone else to assemble and format the work and then print a few hundred or a couple of thousand copies, that's his choice. It's time consuming work, so I understand the benefit of passing that onto someone more equipped to do it.

He isn't an "expert" like you when it comes to self publishing and everything else.

His book also isn't going to be a cheap ass $9.99 kindle or $19.99 paperback version of Poolology. (decent profit for the paperback based on low cost to produce with paper cover and pages)

I'm not knocking your concept in charging very little that everyone can cough up without batting an eye and then selling thousands. But it's not what he's interested in doing

Hell, you might sell 250,000 and get rich as hell even giving away a large portion to Amazon. And if so, good for you.

I've thought about it myself. (not pool related) I've seen these quick money making sales schemes selling the product for $3.00 but then tacking on $10 for shipping and handling when it might cost no more than a buck.
 
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And why would you give a flip anyway?
You've stated you don't believe in any of it...so why is it a concern??
Just forget about it, leave us successful devotees alone, and continue using what you're using.
Isn't that the most novel idea you ever heard? Just leave us alone to transfer knowledge to those who desire it.
Thank you very much for calling.
Regards,
P.L.

Did it ever occur to you that I may be interested in reading it? I've bought tons of pool books over the years. Read them cover to cover. There is usually something in every one of them worth knowing. I bought Brians book, Stans first DVD, I have Joe Tuckers Aiming by the numbers, Brumbacks DVD, Banking by the Beard and there are probably others who've been on here whose work I've bought and don't remember at this exact moment. I lost many of the physical copies of older books some years ago. I even watched all of JB's videos, for crying out loud.
 
Did it ever occur to you that I may be interested in reading it? I've bought tons of pool books over the years. Read them cover to cover. There is usually something in every one of them worth knowing. I bought Brians book, Stans first DVD, I have Joe Tuckers Aiming by the numbers, Brumbacks DVD, Banking by the Beard and there are probably others who've been on here whose work I've bought and don't remember at this exact moment. I lost many of the physical copies of older books some years ago. I even watched all of JB's videos, for crying out loud.


So have you been watching the videos by Stan that I've put up over the last few weeks? Been to the table with any of it to try for yourself?

There's some stuff in today's videos you can take to the table.
 
It's interesting to get your perspective on this. Obviously Stan has great plans for his book, and it is a daunting task to assemble a big work like this. Personally, if I had a passion product such as this, my instincts would be to at least try to put something together myself, in order to control as many aspects as possible of the product. Now, if I did that, and the feedback from proof readers was negative, then I'd obviously relinquish control, but I'd hesitate to do so.

If it is true, like Dan White says, that Mr. Shuffets main goal is to create a legacy, then I'd say that presentation may not be quite as important as getting the actual product out. But my intention was not to knock Mr. Shuffet in any way. I'm just curious, as are many on here, why this has taken so long, and why the marketing seems to ramp up and then suddenly die down, over and over. It's very odd.

I imagine a few hundred pages and countless photos/illustrations would be difficult to work with for anyone not computer/digital savvy. I PM'd Stan a couple of years ago about self publishing as an option to avoid expensive charges that many "vanity publishers" require. Stan said he was satisfied/pleased with the publisher he was using.

The thing is, unlike big name commercial publishers (Random House, Scribner, etc...), smaller independent publishers will publish anything that an aspiring writer pays them to publish. And, unfortunately, when it comes to the small-time world of pool and billiards books, most big publishers won't invest in them. So that leaves two options -- pay someone to publish your book for you or publish it yourself. And the first is no more glamorous than the other. Both are backseat options when compared to having a book accepted by a major publisher at zero cost.
 
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