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anonymous

Google Reaches Books Deal With Italy - WSJ.com - 0 views

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    ROME-Google Inc. on Wednesday said it will scan ancient Italian literary texts ranging from Galileo Galilei to herbal medicine manuals as part of the Internet company's first publishing partnership with a national government. The deal involves digitizing up to one million books held in the National Libraries in Rome and Florence.
Ryan Fuller

Macmillan's DynamicBooks Lets Professors Rewrite E-Textbooks - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    In a kind of Wikipedia of textbooks, Macmillan, one of the five largest publishers of trade books and textbooks, is introducing software called DynamicBooks, which will allow college instructors to edit digital editions of textbooks and customize them for their individual classes.
kkholland

Production plummets in L.A. in 2009 | Company Town | Los Angeles Times - 0 views

  • var sectionNamePath=document.getElementById('sectionBreadcrumb'); var defaultTabPath = sectionNamePath.getElementsByTagName("a")[0].href; if (defaultTabPath.charAt(defaultTabPath.length-1)=="/"){defaultTabPath=defaultTabPath.substring(0, defaultTabPath.length-1);} var lowerTabPath = "null"; defaultTabPath="http://www.latimes.com/business/"; lowerTabPath="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/entertainmentnewsbuzz/"; var t=jQuery("#root li a[href="+lowerTabPath+"]"); if(t.length==0){t=jQuery("#root li a[href="+lowerTabPath+"/]");} if(t.length!=0){ t=t.slice(0, 1); t.parent().attr("class", "highlight"); t.parent().parent().attr("class", "level2 subStay"); t.parent().parent().parent().attr("class", "navLink highlight"); } else { t=jQuery("#root li a[href="+defaultTabPath+"]"); if(t.length==0){t=jQuery("#root li a[href="+defaultTabPath+"/]");} if(t.length!=0){ t.parent().attr("class", "navLink highlight"); t.parent().children("ul.level2").attr("class", "level2 subStay"); } } tribHover(); document.getElementById('root').style.visibility = 'visible'; Company TownThe business behind the show « Previous Post | Company Town Home | Next Post » Production plummets in L.A. in 2009 January 14, 2010 |  8:15 am It may have been a banner year at the box office, but 2009 was a complete dud for local film and TV production.
  • Hardest hit was feature-film production, which had been steadily falling over much of the last decade as L.A. lost jobs to Canada and, increasingly, other states such as New Mexico, Louisiana and Michigan that offer lucrative tax credits and rebates to filmmakers. California's newly adopted film tax credit program helped to blunt the downturn, with production activity increasing by double digits in the second half of the year. About 50 productions have qualified to receive about $100 million in tax credits since the state program debuted this summer
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    Discussion of decline in television and film production in Los Angeles area in 2009. Causes include the strike, fewer pilots, use of sound stages, etc.
Theresa de los Santos

Amazon offers authors bigger cut of book sales, snubs traditional publishers | Technolo... - 0 views

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    Amazon is playing hardball with book publishers. The Seattle online bookseller says it will give authors a 70% cut of the sale of e-books sold for its Kindle readers, essentially offering writers a way to bypass traditional book publishers.
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