Great, Great, Great, Incredible, Gorgeous — Apple Polishing at Apple
Apple executives apparently use the same playbook — even for adjectives.
Apple executives apparently use the same playbook — even for adjectives.
Access to the scientific literature by small and medium-sized businesses is good, although it could be a lot easier, according to a new report.
Another “Did You Know?” video has appeared, this time talking about convergence. Maybe it also shows that with each video, we’re closer to the future that once astounded us.
Is the creation of an author publication fund really an experiment? Or a piece of fiscal advocacy dressed up in scientific clothes?
Google seems to be playing nice with news operations. But are they really? And are the news organizations as open to change as they should be?
A 2.0 Publishing talk delivers little more than anecdotes, buzzwords, and a narrative that conflates technological, biological, and cultural evolution. Does “Content Nation” really deliver a new view of publishing? Or just a business model borrowed from Web 2.0?
The new RSSCloud, embraced by a major blog platform, could deliver the real-time Web to publishing in a way that makes latency a thing of the past.
Operation eBook Drop has delivered hundreds of books to soldiers in less than a week. It says a lot about indie authors and the power of digital distribution.
They Might Be Giants has produced a children’s album alleging that “Science Is Real.”
It seems like a new e-reading device is announced every day. But each device has its own file format and its own unique interface. How can publishers be expected to develop products for such a fragmented market?
Sony, Amazon, Apple, Barnes & Noble, AT&T, Verizon — a veritable who’s who of consumer electronics and communications has entered the e-reader fray. Do they smell blood in the water? Is it yours?
Textbook publishers engage in a massive shoveling of content onto the iPhone. Will students dig it?
The Cure, sung as only school kids can sing.
The Google Books Settlement deadline is upon us. What did you choose?
A Trojan horse argument about links misses the point — copyright and contracts reach farther.