“Value-Added Apps” brought Gus Balbontin, Global Innovation Manager of Lonely Planet; Michel Kripalani, President of app publisher Oceanhouse Media; and Pete Myers, co-creator of the BirdsEye iPhone app, ogether with moderator Neal Hoskins, founder of digital publisher WingedChariot, to discuss the current challenges and opportunities of app development. (One challenge: Toddlers! We’ll get to that…Continue Reading
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Tagged Android, BirdsEye, Gus Balbontin, iPhone, Lonely Planet, Michel Kripalani, Neal Hoskins, Oceanhouse Media, Pete Myers, Tools of Change, WingedChariot
As authors venture further into inking separate e-book or multimedia deals with publishers like Open Road, the threat of lawsuits from their print publishers looms. The legal tug-of-war has only just begun with the 2001 judgment in the Random House v. Rosetta Books case, said speakers at the “Rethinking Author Contracts for the Digital World” panel during last month’s Publishing Business Conference in New York.
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Tagged Amazon, Apple, ASCAP, Bill Patry, Breakfast of Champions, CHORUSS, Copyright Clearance Center, Google, Google Books, iPhone, iTunes, John Silbersack, Kurt Vonnegut, Macmillan, Markus Dohle, OnCopyright Conference, Open Road, Publishing Business Conference, Random House, Random House v. Rosetta Books, Rosetta Books, Sara Pearl, Sidney H. Stein, Sophie's Choice, Trident Media Group, William Styron
“If you don’t eat your own children, someone else will”: That’s how Michael Mace, Principal of the Silicon Valley–based Rubicon Consulting, began his presentation, “Check Out My Scars: Seven Lessons from the Failure of E-Books in 2000, and What They Mean to the Future of Electronic Publishing,” at the 2010 O’Reilly Tools of Change for…Continue Reading
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Tagged Adobe Content Server, Agatha Christie, Amazon, Apple, apps, Barnes & Noble, Brian O'Leary, CDS, consumer value, demand generation, Dick Brass, Dominique Raccah, DRM, e-books, e-readers, electronic publishing, Evelyn Waugh, file distribution, Franklin eBookMan, Go Reader, Google, Graham Greene, Hiebook, iBookstore, iPad, iPhone, iPod, iTunes, Kindle, Kirk Biglione, marketing, Medialoper, Michael Mace, Microsoft, Napster, Nook, O'Reilly, O'Reilly Tools of Change for Publishing, Oxford Media Works, P2P, Palm, Patricia Highsmith, peer to peer, periodicals, Pirate Bay, PlaysForSure, Rocket eBook, Rubicon Consulting, Saul Bellow, self-publishing, Softbook, Sony, Sourcebooks, The Burgomeister, Thomas Nelson, Thomas Pynchon, Yahoo!, Zune
Though we’ve recently noticed a few more Kindles on the subway, mobile phones are infinitely more common. As more consumers choose to read e-books on their smartphones rather than purchase standalone e-reading devices, publishers are working to create apps and other iPhone-ready content. Flurry, a company that provides analytics to mobile phone application developers, found…Continue Reading
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Tagged Andrew Savikas, Android, apps, Brent Lewis, Curious George Dictionary, Daniel X, David Langevin, David Pogue, EPUB, Flurry, Hachette, Harlequin, HarperCollins, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, Indigo, iPhone, iTunes, Kindle, L.A. Candy, Lauren Conrad, Lexcycle, Lonely Planet, Maja Thomas, Mark Coker, Matthew Cashmore, Maximum Ride, mobile market, mobile phones, O'Reilly, Poppy, Quick Response Code, Safari Books, ScrollMotion, Shel Silverstein, Shortcovers, smartphones, Smashwords, Stanza, Susan Katz, The Polar Express, Twilight, Wattpad
Though nobody’s immune to the bad economy, distributors haven’t taken as much of a hit as other groups in publishing this year. “It’s easier in this economy to be working with a large distribution group,” says Eugenia Pakalik, Director of Sales and Marketing Distribution Services at Norton. The ideal IPM client, says Jane Graf, Director…Continue Reading
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Tagged Consortium, distribution, ebooks, Eugenia Pakalik, Greenleaf Book Group, International Publishers Marketing, iPhone, IPM, Jane Graf, Joe Bulger, Kindle, Kristen Sears, Marianne Bohr, Mobipocket, National Book Network, NBN, netLibrary, Norton, Perseus, Perseus Book Group, PGW, sales, Simon & Schuster, Sony, Sony Reader, zinio
They’re not yet ubiquitous on the subway. And the “paperless office” is still a dream at this point. Our second annual industry survey of industry professionals found that 70% of respondents had never read an e-book. It’s unlikely that entry-level employees will receive shiny new Sony Readers with their company handbooks any time soon. Still,…Continue Reading
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Tagged agents, Amazon, Borders, carbon footprint, Carolyn Pittis, Cathy Goldsmith, e-readers, ebooks, Golden Books, Hachette, HarperCollins, iPhone, James Lichtenberg, Kindle, Levine Greenberg, Lightspeed, Macmillan, manuscripts, paperless office, Penguin, Perseus, Random House, Simon & Schuster, Sony Reader, survey, Victoria Skurnick, wireless
By Ariel Aberg-Riger I love Google. Like, a lot. I use Google Reader. And Gmail. And Google Docs. And Google Calendar. And Google Analytics. I happily let Google see everything I do. I eagerly await the day Google search can be fused to my brain. So, when I first heard the rumors about Google’s mobile…Continue Reading
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Tagged Android, apps, Ariel Aberg-Riger, barcodes, e-readers, Gmail, Google Analytics, Google Books, Google Calendar, Google Docs, Google phone, Google Reader, iPhone, iTunes, open source, T-Mobile
So now there are two more e-book devices going head to head with Sony’s Reader, and neither of them is talking about it. Yet. First there is the iPhone, which some see as the publishing industry’s first viable ePhoneBook, though Apple’s interest appears to be nonexistent. Still, when it was first introduced, the CNET editors…Continue Reading