ENTRIES TAGGED "publishingwir"

Publishing News: Week in Review

Publishing News: Week in Review

Digital text and learning, improving the browsing experience, Amazon's publishing projects

In the latest Publishing News: A study found digital text might disrupt cognitive mapping, digital browsing solutions are discussed in Pete Meyers' latest "Breaking the Page" installment, and Amazon launches its fourth imprint.

Publishing News: Week in Review

Publishing News: Week in Review

U.S. News reinvents itself with data, the iPad isn't just a digital screen, and startups get a showcase.

In the latest Publishing News: US News & World Report replaced national advertising with data-driven revenue streams, iPad magazine publishers are missing the boat, and publishing startups will soon have a new way to get attention.

Publishing News: Week in Review

Publishing News: Week in Review

NPR for ebooks, piracy as a promotional tool, and how and when book trailers work.

In the latest Publishing News: Gluejar wants to apply a public broadcasting model to ebooks, Megan Lisa Jones "pirated" her own book, and Quirk Books VP Brett Cohen discusses the intricacies of book trailers.

Publishing News: Week in Review

Publishing News: Week in Review

Amazon launched Cloud Drive, the Google Books settlement might get complicated, and good data leads to good business.

In the latest Publishing News: Amazon extended its reach into the cloud, Dana Newman looked at overlapping issues between the Google Book settlement and Golan v. Holder, and what publishers need to do with all that data.

Publishing News: Week in Review

Publishing News: Week in Review

Ereader complexity, the problems of ebook pricing, and how HTML5 can help publishers

In the latest Publishing News: Are readers using all the extraneous toys on ereaders or are they more of a hindrance to reading; Todd Sattersten chimed in on the complexity of ebook pricing; and Marcin Wichary made a case for HTML5 in the publishing space.

Publishing News: Week in Review

Publishing News: Week in Review

Margaret Atwood isn't sold on merchandise, piracy isn't all about price, and a Lonely Planet app ditches the book

In the latest Publishing News: Merchandising will not save publishing, but Margaret Atwood made T-shirts anyway; Facebook's comment plugin reduces comments, but maybe for the better; piracy isn't just about price; and Lonely Planet moved beyond the book..

Publishing News: Week in Review

Publishing News: Week in Review

The agency model may be illegal, copyright and the Supreme Court, and Flipboard sticks to content.

In the latest Publishing News: The European Commission questions the legitimacy of the agency model, Avon Impulse is testing an all-digital model, Golan v. Holder will have big repercussions regardless of the final decision, and Flipboard puts content above sources.

Publishing News: Week in Review

Publishing News: Week in Review

HarperCollins outraged librarians, publishers get creative with distribution, and digital authors need new skills.

In the latest Publishing News: HarperCollins capped titles for libraries; publishers are tapping non-traditional outlets for distribution; and Dana Newman schools authors on how to embrace the e-pocalypse.

Publishing News: Week in Review

Publishing News: Week in Review

Google One Pass debuted, marginalia could be a revenue stream, and why brick-and-mortar bookstores aren't headed for extinction.

In this week's edition of Publishing News: Apple's subscription policy sparked market competition; despite claims to the contrary, marginalia won't die by the digital hand; and thoughts on why publishing has entered a golden age.

Publishing News: Week in Review

Publishing News: Week in Review

The American Chemical Society gets recognized for its app, Bloomsbury changes focus on rights, and the tablet wars flare up

In this week's edition of Publishing News: The American Chemical Society's slick mobile app gets recognized, Bloomsbury ditched its territory structure, and HP took aim at Apple with its TouchPad tablet and publisher-friendly subscription policies.