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arnie Grossblatt

Official Google Blog: Discover more than 3 million Google eBooks from your choice of bo... - 1 views

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    Google discusses Google Editions
arnie Grossblatt

Official Google Blog: Being bad to your customers is bad for business - 2 views

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    Google adjusts an algorithm to to combat SEO gaming.  No longer true (at least on Google) that "All publicity is good publicity"
kaysha johnston

Who Moved My Buy Button - 0 views

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    The Authors Guild website that will alert authors when Amazon removes the buy button from their books.
arnie Grossblatt

VIDEO: Planning for a Long Career in an Industry That's Changing - 0 views

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    Mike Shatzkin discusses career longevity in publishing.  
arnie Grossblatt

Google Set to Launch E-Book Venture - 0 views

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    Launch of Google Editions rumored to be set for this month.
Debbie Bezanson

Joe Wikert's Publishing 2020 Blog: Publishing in the Social World - 0 views

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    Publishing in a Social World
arnie Grossblatt

Re-imagining the future of the university press - 2 views

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    This issue of the Journal of Electronic Publishing is devoted to the future of university presses.
Rebecca Benner

Biochemical Journal - Semantic FAQ - 0 views

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    Check out the video--very cool PDF reader.
kaysha johnston

Why Tina Brown Might Not Be Crazy to Kill Newsweek.com - 2 views

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    An interesting analysis of what Newsweek should do about merging its two sites. It's much more complicated than one might think at first.
Derik Dupont

E-Reader Sales Expected to Be Big This Holiday - NYTimes.com - 2 views

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    Interesting article. I don't really agree with this statement: Maybe too much, said Michael Norris, a senior analyst for Simba Information. "I don't think that the U.S. market can support 50 or 60 e-readers," he said, adding that he had lost count of all the current models. The market can support it; it gives people more options, but it'll just turn into a matter of what device addresses/achieves all of the needs of the consumer. Like the model Arnie went over in class, it's like a bell curve of technological advances that we want/would like, slowly get, but that eventually ends up swamping us. We start out wanting a and b, then c, d, and e are added, which we like. By the time it hits m, n, o, and p, we're overwhelmed.
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.
rumitlove

Amazon Selling So Many Kindles It Can't Count Them - 1 views

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    Couple weeks old but still quite relevant
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