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arnie Grossblatt

Will the Book Survive Generation Text? - 1 views

  • This shift, of course, plays into the problem, since any shrewd publishing type can see how the paper book's demise might make it easier to digitally trim, abridge, and repackage texts in more "appealing" forms than their benighted authors envisaged.
  • A useful text with which to muse on this subject is Robert Darnton's The Case for Books: Past, Present, and Future (PublicAffairs, 2009).
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    A reflection on threats to sustained, immersive reading and the culture that produces it.
arnie Grossblatt

Bridges Of Virtue: Indie Publishers As The Golden Mean | Digital Book World - 2 views

  • You may note my repeated emphasis on the small size of Independent Publishers, and how this can give them the advantage, in some instances, against Big Publishers. The reason for this is that small entities are generally more adaptable than larger ones, and during this period of transition to the New World – where we know the landscape is changing, but not what it is changing into – publishers need to be adaptable in order to survive; in order to thrive, they need to be willing to experiment. Many of the experiments they take when they test the waters will result in failure, but as Independent Publishers have less to lose and more to gain, they will be that much more innovative.
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    Small indie publishers are likely to be the source of innovation for publishing.
arnie Grossblatt

Ebooks Don't Cannibalize Print, People Do - 2 views

  • The most important lesson I can convey to book publishing professionals is that they must understand that those of us who have made the transition to ebooks, buy ebooks, not print books. Ebook reading device users don’t shop in bookstores and then decide what edition they want; ebook device readers buy what is available in ebookstores. Search an ebookstore for a title and if it doesn’t come up, it doesn’t exist – no matter how many versions are available in print
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    Publishers need to recognize that readers are shifting to ereading, and for this group if it's not in e-book format it doesn't exist.
Liz Rich

Ebook restrictions leave libraries facing virtual lockout | Books | The Guardian - 1 views

  • Publishers Association (PA)
  • just announced a clampdown, informing libraries they may have to stop allowing users to download ebooks remotely and instead require them to come to the library premises, just as they do to get traditional print books – arguably defeating the object of the e-reading concept.
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    Another example of how DRM and ebooks are broken...
Lia Carroll-Hackett

The Undesigned Web - 0 views

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    "It's that separability of design and text that has led to the third wave of the web, in which readers (or what some would call end-users) are in control of how the content they are reading looks. And, as it turns out, many of those readers like their designs to be as minimal as possible."
arnie Grossblatt

Your Privacy Online - What They Know - WSJ.com - 9 views

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    A must-read series on online privacy by the Wall Street Journal.  If you browse the web, if you write email, if you have an ISP you should know about this  
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    I know we've discussed in class how Google (and other entities) seems to know so much about us, but isn't it a bit naive to assume the opposite? We expose a piece of our private lives in every way: credit cards for example track where we go, where we eat, what we buy, and the like. Even if paying cash at places, we're signing up for list servs, blogs, campaigns, donating to charities that require contact information, filling out surveys. Given this, is it all that surprising that we are being "watched"? I don't think it's possible to function in today's society without exposing much of ourselves (when you want to pay cash somewhere, the bank knows when, where, what time of day you withdrew money), unless we change our names or deliver false information.
Natalie Barnes

BOOK VIEW CAFE BLOG » The Absent Silence - 5 views

  • how Google gets and handles its information is an industrial secret
  • But a great corporation, even one sworn to do no evil, makes no such bargain with the public. There is no reciprocity. Trust is not mutual. It’s understood that the public interest, if considered at all, comes second to the interests of the corporation — profit, growth, and power. So the corporation can and will keep its secrets, even though what it is dealing in is information, even when its business is making knowledge accessible, open, free — the very opposite of keeping secrets.
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    Ursula K. LeGuin is disturbed by Google's keeping secrets about information
arnie Grossblatt

Google Introduces E-Bookstore - 0 views

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    Google Editions launches!  This should be fun to watch.
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    Strange how there is no Arts/Culture subject category to browse (film? music? art? photography? painting? dance?), since they have other categories defined...
arnie Grossblatt

thedigitalist.net » Skills in the Digital Era part two - 0 views

  • in my view there is no need for a digital editor as such in a trade publishing house, rather an editor who understands the digital world:
  • two key issues: accuracy of conversion, which we set at 99.999999%, instead of some competitors’ 99.95%, and attending to the reader experience by providing accurate and appropriate metadata, which is one of the points I want to illustrate later on to show why I believe editors need new knowledge not new skills
  • Writing that uses new media by incorporating visuals, sound, movies and so on in different delivery platforms such as the new Sony Reader, Alternate Reality Games mixing narrative and interaction by readers and contributors, self-published material, collaborative wikinovels and other kinds of informal, or extra-formal creativity, are exactly the kind of material that a traditional trade publishing house such as Pan Macmillan, however innovative, finds it very difficult to use, or even acknowledge, in a publishing process, and it’s unlikely to be seriously practical in the short term, which means until someone can think of a way to make money out of it, not least because digital projects are typically seen by customers and authors as free or very low-cost, when in fact they’re often more expensive than traditional ones because of the high set-up and development costs
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • it’s marketing that will have to continue to change the most to find new readers and new ways of reaching readers.
  • What it needs to do instead is create a new post-publishing process, a sort of après-lit, which makes clever and effective use of reader involvement through websites and with social-networking tools, but that is familiar Web 2.0 material and outside the scope of this answer.
  • How much is digital going to change the way I work?’
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    One editor's take what endures and what changes for publishers and editors in the digital world.
Helen Nam

Technology Review: Wikipedia and the Meaning of Truth - 0 views

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    Interesting article about how Wikipedia relies on verifiability, not truth.
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    This article discusses Wikipedia's standard -- not truth, but verifiability.
Stephanie Wynn

The Way We Webbed: A Decade of Google -- Oh, the Joy of Cyberpast - washingtonpost.com - 0 views

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    A light article on the last decade of Google and its influence, but also some interesting tidbits about attempts to archive the Web. What's worth archiving? How to go about it?
Paul Riccardi

How Facebook is taking over our lives - Feb. 17, 2009 - 0 views

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    Unless you've been living on Mars, in a cave, under a rock, with your fingers in your ears, you obviously know Facebook is ubiquitous. Companies are taking advantage of that fact. The accompanying charts are fascinating.
Thelisha Woods

How Does Google News Rank Stories - 0 views

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    For Google News publishers, getting high placement in Google News can be great. Most publishers would love to see prime time placement of their stories on the main Google News home page, but many settle for ranking well in Google......
Paul Riccardi

How to Save Your Newspaper - TIME - 0 views

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    Last one on the newspaper industry. But this one offers up some advice for papers to stay afloat in the digital age, instead of just tolling the death knell.
Paul Riccardi

Why Cloud Computing Still Doesn't Work and How Google Will Fix it | Gadget Lab from Wir... - 0 views

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    Never really heard of this until I saw the topic listing for our assignment. But the theory behind sounds great. The implementation so far, not so much.
Rob A.

dual-display e-book reader - 0 views

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    Interesting video of a dual display ebook reader. Design is based on usability analyses of how people use printer materials.
Derik Dupont

Eric Schmidt: How Google Can Help Newspapers - WSJ.com - 0 views

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    In The Wall Street Journal, Google CEO Eric Schmidt says that the Internet will not destroy news organizations. He says that Google working in cooperation with publishers of newspapers and magazines can help bring about a business model to share ad revenue from searches." />
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