A Journal Feeds Wikipedia
A journal begins requiring authors to submit peer-reviewed pages to Wikipedia. Is this a great idea?
A journal begins requiring authors to submit peer-reviewed pages to Wikipedia. Is this a great idea?
Image via CrunchBase Back in May 2008, I wrote about a new publishing venture, 8020 Publishing, and their magazines, Everywhere and JPG. They had an intriguing idea — magazines based on user-submitted (amateur) content. And they had plenty of content, […]
When you have to walk the talk, you end up self-publishing. Can it succeed for a work of fiction?
Has the iPhone put the Kindle in the corner? Or will users be predictably irrational and complicate things for publishers?
The Blackberry Storm looks to be a weak clipper system rather than a hurricane. Meanwhile, the iPhone may be poised to control the weather.
As we shut off the stoves in the Scholarly Kitchen for 2008, we leave you with an inspirational montage of famous film moments.
Sure, the news is a commodity now, but perhaps losing the data is what triggered the beginning of the end for newspapers.
The grim parade of dead magazines — put to music!
YouTube is the #2 search engine in the world. Will digital natives be more video-centric than text-centric?
When you wrap your presents, are you also being bombarded by x-rays?