I have what amounts to sort of a part time job for a specific person, doing odds and ends. Now, stuff like painting a porch or pressure washing a walkway, it makes sense to charge strictly by how long it takes to do. That's simple. But one item, and one I intend to interleave with the others because it's both enjoyable a bit at a time and very long overall, is turning old home videotapes into DVDs.
The way I do that is as follows: play the whole tape into EyeTV; cut out bad or blank spots, if any; separate material from different events if applicable; export resulting file(s); reassemble and set up menus in iDVD; create disc image; burn however many discs are wanted; file away disc image in case more are wanted later, along with the files used to make it in case they're ever useful after DVD's are obsolete.
Obviously, this takes a good bit longer than just watching the tape. On the other hand, for much of that time, I'm not actually *doing* anything. During the recording step, I have to be able to notice if anything goes wrong, but otherwise don't have to pay attention and can do other things (like, for instance, going to Fratching for advice.) During the export and image creation steps, the computer is working as hard as it can, and especially with the image, tends to mess up if I try to do much else with it at the same time, but at the same time it doesn't even need monitoring like it does during recording.
So what counts as work? It doesn't seem fair to try to charge the whole time, and anyway that would result in getting to do a lot less of this particular task which I enjoy. On the other hand, I don't want to shortchange myself either.
The way I do that is as follows: play the whole tape into EyeTV; cut out bad or blank spots, if any; separate material from different events if applicable; export resulting file(s); reassemble and set up menus in iDVD; create disc image; burn however many discs are wanted; file away disc image in case more are wanted later, along with the files used to make it in case they're ever useful after DVD's are obsolete.
Obviously, this takes a good bit longer than just watching the tape. On the other hand, for much of that time, I'm not actually *doing* anything. During the recording step, I have to be able to notice if anything goes wrong, but otherwise don't have to pay attention and can do other things (like, for instance, going to Fratching for advice.) During the export and image creation steps, the computer is working as hard as it can, and especially with the image, tends to mess up if I try to do much else with it at the same time, but at the same time it doesn't even need monitoring like it does during recording.
So what counts as work? It doesn't seem fair to try to charge the whole time, and anyway that would result in getting to do a lot less of this particular task which I enjoy. On the other hand, I don't want to shortchange myself either.
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