How the New York Times Bestseller List Is Created
A short video explaining how the list is made.
A short video explaining how the list is made.
What better way to show how to make a great PowerPoint than with PowerPoint examples?
Is the growth of open access journals a sign of market success or dysfunction? Two new studies analyze the data and come to opposite conclusions.
The false premise of replacement means the future isn’t destructive, just additive.
Britain’s response to economic hard times might infect the US higher education system, and lead to major cuts in the humanities and social sciences.
The self-publishing adventure that began here two years ago winds down. What worked? What didn’t?
Another science blogging network implodes, a sign that the age of exuberance is giving way to the business realities.
Sensors are being applied to mobile phones, which will launch a new suite of publishing opportunities. By aggregating and interpreting the data uploaded from these mobile sensors, publishers can create new services and open up new markets.
If submission fees result in a more sustainable business model, why are open access publishers opposed to the idea?
The Wikileaks scandal shows that commercial cloud providers aren’t ready for the realities of publishing and information hosting.
Privacy is something we trade in all the time. The questions are about the best trades to make.
NIH-funded researchers append name to ghost-written textbook. Is it time for physicians to heal themselves?
When watching football on Thanksgiving, remember that those cheerleaders might have more to offer than pulchritude.
A recent New York Times Magazine feature plays off fears that the next generation is prone to distraction and underachievement. The facts, and an apparently superior media outlet, argue otherwise.
Improper use of financial analysis can obscure problems in strategy, a problem faced by for-profit and not-for-profit organizations alike.