Monday, May 23, 2011

Nature's $49 eTextbook

The financial times is reporting that on Tuesday Nature publishing will announce an experimental eTextbook offering pricing an electronic textbook at $49 for lifetime usage including frequent updates to the content. More from the FT:

The inaugural textbook in this new programme, Principles of Biology, will be used by three California State University campuses beginning this autumn.

Gerry Hanley, senior director for academic technology services at Cal State, said the university intended to expand the programme. On two campuses, students will be responsible for purchasing the digital textbook dihttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifrectly from Nature. The third Cal State campus will purchase a site licence for the textbook and pass the cost along to students, a model similar to the way academic journals are sold.

The transition from an ownership model to an access model is already upending the music and film businesses, and Nature believes textbooks could be next. The textbook business is already under assault from websites such as Chegg.com, which match buyers and sellers of used textbooks. Nature’s new programme could provide yet another hitch.



Nature

Sunday, May 22, 2011

MediaWeek (Vol 4, No 21): End of World Edition - An Essay on Privacy, Books & Marketing, Libraries + More

From the Chronicle of Higher Ed an essay on privacy from law educator Daniel J. Solove: Why Privacy Matters Even if You Have 'Nothing to Hide' (Chronicle):
Most attempts to understand privacy do so by attempting to locate its essence—its core characteristics or the common denominator that links together the various things we classify under the rubric of "privacy." Privacy, however, is too complex a concept to be reduced to a singular essence. It is a plurality of different things that do not share any one element but nevertheless bear a resemblance to one another. For example, privacy can be invaded by the disclosure of your deepest secrets. It might also be invaded if you're watched by a peeping Tom, even if no secrets are ever revealed. With the disclosure of secrets, the harm is that your concealed information is spread to others. With the peeping Tom, the harm is that you're being watched. You'd probably find that creepy regardless of whether the peeper finds out anything sensitive or discloses any information to others. There are many other forms of invasion of privacy, such as blackmail and the improper use of your personal data. Your privacy can also be invaded if the government compiles an extensive dossier about you.

Privacy, in other words, involves so many things that it is impossible to reduce them all to one simple idea. And we need not do so.
Matthew Ingram looks for the lessons in the success of Go the Fuck to Sleep (GigaOm):
What some call “piracy” can actually be free marketing, as noted by some prominent authors. Neil Gaiman, for example, has said he was initially outraged by unauthorized sharing of his books, and tried to help his publisher stop it, but eventually he came to the conclusion that what piracy really amounts to is “people lending books.” As he put it in a video interview earlier this year:
[U]nderstanding that gave me a whole new idea of the shape of copyright and what the web was doing. Because the biggest thing the web was doing is allowing people to hear things, allowing people to read things, allowing people to see things they might never have otherwise seen. And I think, basically, that’s an incredibly good thing.
Another prominent example of this is Brazilian author Paulo Coelho. The well-known fantasy author doesn’t just take piracy in stride — he has actually assisted people in pirating his own books, by uploading copies of them to file-sharing networks (as has Gaiman). In the case of one book, doing this with a Russian translation helped build awareness of his other books in that country, where Coelho now sells millions of copies. He pirated his own works over the protests of his publisher, but the outcome was spectacularly successful.
From PaidContent's Laura Hazard Owen: How Libraries Are Bypassing Big Publishers To Build Their E-Book Offerings (PaidContent):
As a result of these restrictions by big publishers, McCormack says librarians are turning to smaller presses, which are generally less restrictive about offering access to their ebooks. Library Journal‘s arrangement with NetGalley will introduce librarians to new titles from many of these smaller e-book-only romance publishers. Angela James, Executive Editor of Harlequin’s Carina Press, estimates that over half of digital-first content is in the romance genre.
James predicts that romance e-book originals will be a hit for libraries. “Romance readers are such voracious readers and they can’t afford to buy all that content,” she says. They also tend to be very loyal to specific authors, so checking out e-books in libraries gives them a chance to try out authors they’re unfamiliar with, she says.
The (NY) Observer profiles Bonnie Fuller while also rehashing the nastiness and doesn't provide a punch-line (Observer):
After walking away from Us Weekly at her peak, surprising colleagues and inviting still more biting press attention, it was on to American Media Inc., where she'd been hired as editorial director overseeing a number of titles, including Star. Ms. Fuller's fall was sudden and would have seemed almost random had it not made for such delicious wish-fulfillment among those who'd long rooted for her demise.
When she left American Media in May 2008, with plans to start a new company, Bonnie Fuller Media, few were heartbroken by the reversal of fortune. Ms. Fuller planned, vaguely, to take on cyberspace with a web startup that promised, as this paper put it, to "approach Ms. Fuller as a brand" and "feature her blogging about topics such as gossip, fashion, and romance."
Real life 'Dad’s Army' revealed in secret diary Life in the Home Guard was often as hapless and farcical as the antics depicted in Dad’s Army, a newly-discovered diary suggests. "Yes, Captain Mainwaring, Sir" (Telegraph)
The diary shows that, like Captain Mainwaring, Mr Foster is constantly frustrated at the actions of his platoon, with both the young and old members proving unreliable.
In one incident, he describes sending a pair of young volunteers off to guard a remote waterworks overnight. He is not confident that they will stay awake, so he walks to the spot to check. Sure enough, when he arrives all is quiet, as he makes his presence heard, he can hear the guards waking up.
In another incident, a rifle target practice session ends in farce because, having split the platoon into competing teams of old and young members, Mr Foster finds the more elderly volunteers cannot hit the target because of their poor eyesight.
Another exercise involved stacking two lots of chairs up opposite each other in the parade hall to create makeshift trenches. Members of the unit then had to attack them using “dummy grenades”. Again, the age of the volunteers showed, so while the “old men” did well, they were forced to “give in from fatigue”.
The unit also take part in a mock invasion exercise at night time, but a number of elderly members decline, because they are scared of going out in the dark.

No doubt lost on many....Whenever we are at home and Dad's Army comes on Mrs PND has been known to wail "Oh no, not Dad's Army again".

From the twitter:

Librarians fight for a role in a digital world: Globe&Mail

Waterstone's future looks positively Daunting

Re-winding A Clockwork Orange with Malcolm McDowell - video

Frederick Forsyth: 'I had expected women to hate him. But no...’

Philip Roth: "I'm not caged in by reality"

Sterling Partners With HarperCollins UK On Reprints Of Classic Thrillers
- Len Deigton and Alistair MacLean

Houghton Mifflin launches $250K education challenge

Pearl Jam to release new book, documentary & album to mark anniversary

Google ditches newspaper archive plan

Hargreaves report recommends overhaul of copyright laws

And in Sport: Champions of England for a record 19th time (MEN)

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Hanging Chickens: Chinatown

Hanging Chickens, Chinatown New York 2007
Another weekly image from the family archive.

This image is from Grand Street in Manhattan not that long ago. Walking through this part of town is like entering a different environment entirely although one that is very familiar to anyone who has visited Hong Kong. In some respects Grand Street is a mirror image of parts of HK.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

BISG in Transition: Scott Lubeck Resigns

Very surprising news from BISG this morning that Executive Director, Scott Lubeck has resigned for personal reasons and will return home to Austin, TX.

Here is the release from BISG this morning:

The Book Industry Study Group (BISG), the industry's leading trade association for policy, standards and research, today announced that Scott Lubeck, Executive Director, has resigned for personal reasons and will be returning to Austin, Texas. Deputy Executive Director Angela Bole has been named to fulfill the functions of the Executive Director on an interim basis, working closely with members of the BISG Executive Committee and Board of Directors.

“BISG has grown enormously in the last two years, tackling bigger issues, expanding the Board of Directors and developing important new initiatives,” said Dominique Raccah, Chair of BISG and Publisher and Chief Executive Officer of Sourcebooks. “On behalf of the BISG Board and the Executive Committee, I wish Scott well in his future endeavors and thank him for his contributions, which have benefited BISG tremendously.”

“I have appreciated the opportunity to serve this important organization and to work with its Executive Committee, Board, membership and staff,” Lubeck said. “It has truly been an honor. I intend to remain a vital part of this industry, and to remain active in BISG and a supporter of its many initiatives.”

Kenneth Michaels, Vice Chair of BISG and Chief Operating Officer, Hachette Book Group, reports that BISG has formed a Search Committee to identify candidates for its Executive Director position. “The Search Committee is seeking a candidate who will expand and enhance the resources BISG provides,” Michaels said. “The book industry looks to BISG for leadership, innovation and vision in a changing marketplace, and we look forward to identifying a candidate who embodies those qualities.” BISG has engaged the services of Bert Davis & Associates to manage the search for a new Executive Director.

“New BISG resources, best practices and research projects are developing at an amazing pace,” said George Tattersfield, Vice President Merchandising, Ingram Content Group Inc., and BISG Treasurer. Over the next few months, he noted, BISG will be releasing:

  • BookStats, the fruit of a joint venture with the Association of American Publishers that provides a comprehensive view of book publishing sales aggregated by revenue, units, categories, formats and distribution channels
  • a series of webcasts on selling more books with metadata
  • best practices for e-book identification
  • a standardized vocabulary for streamlining rights transactions in the digital era.

More information on these initiatives and others in process is available from Angela Bole at angela@bisg.org or 646-336-7141.