<p>^^We were talking just last night about how the guy who invents a tattoo that is permanent but removal without scarring, or figures out a way to remove existing tattoos without scarring is going to make a fortune.</p>
<p>About the end user being kids- our kids hated their yearbook this year. I didn’t hear of one kid who like it. It had tiny pictures of all the teams and clubs in the back, and the inside looked more like a random scrapbook. Personally, I didn’t really care (sunk cost) but it’s too bad that the kids don’t have something they like.</p>
<p>One of the things kids in yearbook class should be learning is that they are producing a product and their objective should be consumer driven- to please the customer and create a nice product that everyone will enjoy. Ours was so poorly put together- no attempt was made by the staff to go out and photograph people around campus (instead we were asked to provide pictures), the team pictures were taken by professional studio; there were captions like “Joe Blow goes in for the slide in our victory against Mother Mary High school XX to XX.” (Literally they put XX to XX). No editting.</p>
<p>Sorry for the rant, I just think that students should be held accountable and responsible for producing quality if they expect to “sell” their product.</p>