Kernest, my web fonts service, has been publicly available for just under a month. In that time – it’s earned 400+ users, 200+ websites, and the became the first font service to sell a commercial web font license. An early success in my book.
This afternoon I had a fantastic hour-long phone conversation with a new user of Kernest. They had lots of questions about how it worked and we bumped into a number of bugs. Some I knew how to resolve easily, others require some more thought.
Yep.
There’s lots there.
Ben pointed me to Kent Beck’s recent ‘Approaching a Minimum Viable Product’ post.
“By far the dominant reason for not releasing sooner was a reluctance to trade the dream of success for the reality of feedback.” – Kent Beck
The current state of Kernest validates 3 of my potentially-fatal assumptions:
- a font service can resolve browser-compatibilities and provide basic asset protections with a simple, standards-compliant URL. (YES!, better than I hoped)
- There are enough liberally licensed fonts of reasonable-quality that a reasonably-sized directory could be boot-strapped. (YES, 300 and counting!)
- Some commercial type designers will be happy to test out a web use license. (YES!)
Now that I’ve got those answers, it’s easier to iterate atop them.
Elsewhere:
Garrick,
I’m glad the post was helpful. Knock off all of your PFAs and you can’t help but succeed 🙂
Kent
Go Go Go Garrick! Release early and often!