Update Programma vrijdag 23 maart

Posted: February 21, 2012 at 2:40 pm  |  By: kimberley  | 

Het programma voor de conferentie op vrijdag 23 maart is bijna rond. Tijdens deze conferentie staat de vraag centraal hoe de keten – van Schrijver tot Lezer en alles daar tussenin – onder druk komt te staan door de opkomst van het E-boek: een nieuwe dimensie voor het uitgeven, redigeren, vormgeven en distribueren van boeken.

00. Korte toekomstvisies van de keten: Uitgeverij en Bibliotheek.
Met o.a. Bas Savenije (Directeur Koninklijke Bibliotheek) en Eppo van Nispen tot Sevenaer (CPNB)

01. Schrijven voor e-boeken, wat blijft hetzelfde, wat kan er nu meer en wat is er anders.
Met Tonnus Oosterhoff (Winnaar P.C. Hoofdprijs 2012), Sidney VollmerMark Staniforth en Henk Wals (Directeur Huygens Instituut)

02. Het proces van manuscript naar e-boek bestand. Wat kan goed, wat kan nog niet en waarom.
Met Frans Havekes (Brill uitgevers) en Jacob Molenaar (epub expert)

03. Vormgeving van e-boeken als de pagina niet meer vast staat, de relatie tekst en illustraties.
Met Megan HoogenboomAymeric Mansoux en Petr van Blokland.

04. De distributie van e-boeken
Pieter Swinkels (Kobo) en Hans Willem Cortenraad (Centraal Boekhuis)

05. Wat is het verschil tussen lezen van papier en het lezen van een scherm.
Met Prof. Adriaan van der Weel (Universiteit van Leiden Bohn-hoogleraar in de moderne geschiedenis van het boek)


 

Eerste namen voor Boek uit de Band!

Posted: February 1, 2012 at 5:04 pm  |  By: kimberley  | 

Het programma van de tweedaagse conferentie Boek uit de Band dat plaatsvindt op 22 en 23 maart in de Openbare Bibliotheek van Amsterdam begint steeds meer vorm te krijgen!

De eerste dag zal geheel besteed worden aan degelijke workshops over het maken van e-boeken. Hoe vertaal je tekst en beeld in een gestandaardiseerde vorm die voor verschillende soorten schermen te lezen is. De nadruk zal liggen op de Epub standaard. Deze workshop zal begeleid worden door Florian Cramer en Jacob Molenaar. Tevens komen werkbare marketing strategieën en verdienmodellen aanbod en wordt er aandacht besteed aan de veranderingen voor de schrijver en redactie.

De tweede dag wordt besteed aan de inhoudelijke aspecten van de keten van schrijver naar lezer, met een accent op de vormgeving en redactionele taken en procedures. De nadruk ligt op het Algemene Boek, fictie en non-fictie. De conferentie is niet bedoelt om een breed overzicht te geven wat er -in principe- allemaal technologisch zou kunnen, maar hoe de uitgeverij, de bibliotheek, de boekhandel en de schrijvers en lezers tezamen “het boek” maken, ontwikkelen en gebruiken. Deze tweede dag zal bestaan uit de volgende thema’s

1. Korte toekomstvisies van de keten: Uitgeverij en Bibliotheek.
Met o.a. Bas Savenije Directeur Koninklijke Bibliotheek
2. Schrijven voor e-boeken, wat blijft hetzelfde, wat kan er nu meer en wat is er anders.
Met Tonnus Oosterhoff Winnaar P.C. Hooftprijs voor 2012, Sidney Vollmer en Mark Staniforth
3. Redactie van e-boeken. Wat verandert er.
4. Vormgeving van e-boeken als de pagina niet meer vast staat, de relatie tekst en illustraties.
5. Het proces van manuscript naar e-boek bestand. Wat kan goed, wat kan nog niet en waarom.
Met o.a. Frans Havekes van Brill uitgevers en Pieter Swinkels van Kobo
6. De distributie van e-boeken en wat is het verschil tussen lezen van papier en het lezen van ene scherm.
Met o.a. Adriaan van der Weel

Tickets voor de tweedaagse conferentie zijn online te koop.

 

Aankondiging symposium ‘Boek uit de Band’

Posted: January 16, 2012 at 3:44 pm  |  By: kimberley  |  Tags: , , , ,

Is het E-boek een hype die wel voorbij gaat?

Ontwikkelingen in Amerika – waar bij Amazon de verkoop van e-boeken die van fysieke boeken voorbij heeft gestreefd – suggereren dat e-boeken geen hype zijn. In China is het digitale boek niet meer weg te denken en bereikt het miljoenen lezers. Met de komst van de tablet is een nieuwe dimensie toegevoegd aan het uitgeven en distribueren van boeken. De keten van schrijver naar lezer en alles wat daar tussenin zit komt onder druk te staan.

Boek-uit-de-band organiseert op 22 en 23 maart 2012 in de Openbare Bibliotheek Amsterdam haar tweede symposium over de ontwikkelingen van het digitale boek waarin alle ontwikkelingen en aspecten van de digitale keten aan bod komen. De nieuwe praktijk wordt in beeld gebracht en het werken binnen die nieuwe praktijk vormgegeven in workshops. Dit symposium wil de deelnemers voorbereiden op het iPod moment van het boek. Noteer vast deze twee belangrijke dagen in uw agenda. Details over de programmering volgen spoedig.

De E-boek trend is voor Nederlandse lezers, schrijvers, redacteuren, vormgevers, uitgevers en distributeurs een werkelijkheid waar men niet meer om heen kan. Unbound / Boek uit de band organiseerde in mei 2011 haar eerste symposium over de digitale ontwikkelingen in de uitgeverij. In tegenstelling tot de eerste keer is het dit jaar in het Nederlands.

TYPE TOWN: 60 Years of Book Design in St. Gallen, Switzerland

Posted: June 8, 2011 at 3:26 pm  |  By: lilyantflick  | 

Internationally renowned designer and professor, Jost Hochuli and Swiss typographer Roland Stieger come together on June 16th 2011 in New York City to reflect on the past sixty years of beautiful book design as well as discuss the future of design in the Swiss town of St. Gallen.

The talk will be moderated by the trendy design blogger, SwissMiss. Designers Paul Shaw and Aswin Sadha will join the discussion as featured guests of AIGA/NY.

A Book Design in St.Gallen exhibition is also on display at the AIGA National Design Center. This exhibition recalls the history and age-old traditions of book design and typography in Swiss workshops.

The show is open to the public from June 16 to July 22, 2011.

 

For more info, please see here.

 

Report from Linz: Eurozine Conference

Posted: June 1, 2011 at 1:12 pm  |  By: gerlofdonga  | 

Eurozine is a Vienna-based non-profit network of over 75 journals and small publications throughout Europe. It aggregates and often translates content from its partner publications for eurozine.com.

Its annual conference this year brought people together to ruminate on the theme ‘Changing Media – Media in Change’. And while ‘change’ is a perpetual condition of the field, organizers wanted answers to the pressing economic and political challenges specific to digital media.

I kept notes on the panels devoted to journalism and copyright. The questions weren’t entirely novel, but the conversation represented some of the dominant currents in these debates.

Panel on Future of Journalism

‘Truth has become an amateur project.’ – Geert Lovink

Jacques Verges, the panel’s chair, introduced his session with this quote from Lovink in order to ask the panelists what to make of so-called amateurs churning out content, often without consideration for the ethics of reporting specific to traditional journalism. Has the internet really turned traditional media into yesterday’s news? And is news really democratizing into a collaborative affair among non-experts?

Not so much, said panelist and media scientist Tamara Witschge. Journalists continue their specific role through processing events and by informed commentary. The important difference is that they’re more often seeking sources from the rest of us.

Which means that for any debate about the future of publishing, this ‘amateur project’ goes in two directions: you could also claim that a process of amateurization is taking place in the newsroom as traditional reporters take tips from civilians. More and more often we find that sources are unnamed and unaccounted for and that ‘desktop journalism’ replaces aggressive on-the-ground fact checking. This potentially leads to homogeneity and news cycling, with stories and press releases moving from blogosphere to newsites and back.

Not all is bleak. New models of news production are taking off, like Pro Publica, a digital-based news organization that makes most of its money from foundations and donors and that aims for high standards amidst a general decline of investigative reporting. Their website puts the problem in economic terms: ‘Time and budget constraints are curbing the ability of journalists not specifically designated “investigative” to do this kind of reporting in addition to their regular beats. This is therefore a moment when new models are necessary to carry forward some of the great work of journalism in the public interest that is such an integral part of self-government, and thus an important bulwark of our democracy.’

If investigative reporting is no longer a product of traditional news agencies, then maybe competently run non-profits like Pro Publica (which was founded by Paul Steiger, founder of the Wall Street Journal, and won a Pulitzer Prize this year for its reports on Wall Street) will fill the gap.

Also couldn’t audience participation be considered good reason to promote a new kind of ethical imperative for ‘digital citizens’ in need of a general level of literacy as producers/publishers? The discussion made me think again that general grade-school education reform is one way to address this issue of accountability to facts.

And just as readers must learn ethical standards and literacies, so reporters must work with new practices, including crowd sourcing and on-line investigation, and to develop rigorous methods of research native to digital media. (Research in this area is being done, for instance, by Richard Rogers’ Digital Methods Initiative at the University of Amsterdam.)

Finally, there are interesting examples of collaboration between readers and reporters and editors that still upholds their distinctive roles. The panel’s second speaker, Krystian Woznicki of the The Berliner Gazette, showed how the Gazette used ‘radical transparency’ by allowing reader comments to filter back into a story, making its development – both corrections and additions – transparent and wiki-like.

What if machines themselves also take part in the filtering? An audience member asked a provocative question: can a software platform reflect the stability or confirmation of accepted verses disputed facts?

With this, we get back to the heart of things, the representation of the truth. But is it truth vs fiction we need, or, in the age of massive leaks, the ability to know what to do once a glut of truths are outed? It certainly seems that journalists and editors of any esteemed platform now must take on the role of synthesizer and filterer, as much as that of fact-gathering muckracker.

Knut Olav Åmås, culture editor of Norwegian daily Aftenposten, was the last speaker. He championed the traditional sector as the central font of ideas and looked-to content. And he points out that we shouldn’t be so scared. He showed us sales figures of a healthy journalism sector, for Scandinavians at least.

Panel on ‘Open or Closed’

Pirjo Hiidenmaa, President of the European Writers’ Council, asked the audience: what exactly are we so afraid of losing? We have more platforms than ever to read on and storytelling and content of all kind are proliferating as new forms. Perhaps we’re what we’re desperately trying to hold onto is the long format book, along with its authors and publishers.

They seem to be threatened, she claimed, by the technological imperative: If piracy is so easy, it will eventually become legal. But how can authors live if they can’t sell their ideas, and, more to the point, how should you sell an idea today?

The go-to answer is still copyright. Put a monetary claim on a text (in the abstract) and then on any physical manifestation it takes. There are now several business models adapting copyright to various physical forms:
-Publish and sell a bounded print book
-Sell ebook files
-License a file (to libraries, schools, and ebook readers)
-Sell a collection to a database for search (mostly libraries and schools)
-Reissue an out of print work (this seems to be catching on for small and large presses)

She also mentioned that individuals could turn to licensing companies to manage collective copyright, often done in the music business and for dramatic works. This is evidently done for writers in Scandinavian countries.

Leonard Dobusch from the Free University of Berlin rebutted that the problem isn’t digital technology but rather finding remuneration for artists – and we should get over our habit of seeing copyright as the solution.

Campaigns depicting how new uses of technologies can starve artists and impoverish creative output go back to cassette tapes. Actually, he showed that there’s been an increase in cultural content between 2002 and 2007: 66% more books, 30% more films, 50% more music.

According to a 2007 study (pdf) by Kretschmer and Hardwick on authors’ earnings from copyright and non-copyright sources, 40% of authors live on writing alone. It’s a monetary distribution problem among writers, and copyright generally means that a smaller number makes a larger amount. Most books don’t live on markets anyway, so copyright makes little sense for niche areas such as linguistic minorities or avant garde literature.

Felix Stalder, a lecturer in digital culture and network theory at the Zürich University of Arts, pointed out that copyright is doing more than just tipping the scales towards the few – it’s a serious societal tax. It makes it harder to access materials and so requires more human labor to find stuff; it implies licensing and lawyer fees, and it has led to the enclosure of three million orphan works that could be feeding into the public domain.

Says Stalder, the economic situation of cultural producers has historically often been poor, forcing artists to find ways to make a living on the side of their craft. But today it’s much worse, with money concentrated at big firms with massive back catalogs and that can afford attorneys to defend their trove – a concentration of cultural economy directly related to copyright. Copyright strengthens blockbuster culture, not the individual artist.

Even worse, mechanisms for enforcing copyright once only included law and the courts to lengthen contracts, but now monopolistic companies use digital surveillance to enforce copyright online.

Stalder called traditional publishing the last vestiges of Fordism, a collapsing frame. Today’s writers will employ new forms of cultural production such as remixing, and publishers will start to promote innovative work that doesn’t jive with copyright. So is it worth enforcing the law if costs of enforcing it are too high (Stalder?

He looked at a few new approaches to sustainability without copyright:
-The cultural flatrate used by a collecting society. But what works should be included? Tweets, blogs? How do you measure what each artist receives? Will surveillance be a problem? How do you distribute money?
-Long tail aggregation that can create mechanisms to relegate income based on attention. But he pointed out this wouldn’t be suitable for minority or niche content. Examples include small-scale donation sites such as flattr.
-Project centered approaches including community financial investments for pre-production. Authors can sell things that can’t be copied, using an economy of affection by building a fan base or rematerialization (books as well-designed fetish objects).
-A final solution could be state or private funding.

A few questions lingered. Why would a publisher pay a writer any advances if there is no copyrighted ‘thing’ to sell in the end, since anyone else could make use of the text as well? If there is no distinctive product or service for a reader, how can artists, editors, and publishers make a living? How can we sell something that doesn’t require the creation of material difference?

Also, with the rise of free and open movements, open access, and open data, new predators come into the mix. Google, Facebook and telecoms are also fighting against copyright. Will they be the new profiteers in a more open setting? If so, how can we move forward in a way that benefits cultural producers and not corporations who see flowing content as integral to their entire business model?

Side note: I spoke with a Finnish editor at the conference who told me about Finland’s model: if you write three books and the books sell decently, then the government pays you an indefinite salary to keep going. Reward for labor well done, plus a general acknowledgment for our need for storytellers. The Scandinavian bard system sounds too good to be true, but could we imagine paying the individual laborer, not their product?

Videos of the Unbound Book Conference

Posted: May 31, 2011 at 12:18 pm  |  By: gerlofdonga  |  Tags: , , , , , , ,  |  1 Comment

For those who couldn’t make it to the recent Unbound Book conference, all videos of the conference are now viewable on vimeo!

Videos are available for each of our five sessions which include:
1- What is a Book?
2- The Unbound Book
3- Ascent of E-Readers
4- Future Publishing Industries
5- Books by Design
6- Horizons of Education and Authoring

Below is Miha Kovac’s compelling talk during the “What is a Book?” session on May 20th.

For more videos please visit our vimeo page here.

IDPF 2011: the Digital Book

Posted: May 26, 2011 at 4:38 pm  |  By: gerlofdonga  |  Tags: ,

For all you e-book formatting geeks out there, a conference on digital books and formats just took place in New York this week. Mostly execs and developers with a smattering of professors giving talks about how our reading devices will shape up. Unfortunately there doesn’t seem to be any documentation of what the speakers had to say.

From their site: IDPF Digital Book 2011 will be a one-and-a-half day educational conference that gives attendees the opportunity to network with global leaders in digital publishing business and technology. Learn about the latest trends in the digital publishing industry through expert panels and in-depth demonstrations and case studies. Included are workshops on the EPUB standard including the new EPUB 3 revision, eBook production, workflow, and best practices.

Saskia De Vries: Hybrid Publishing Model

Posted: May 25, 2011 at 3:09 pm  |  By: gerlofdonga  |  Tags: , , , , , ,

Saskia C.J. De Vries is managing director and senior editor of the Amsterdam University Press. In 2005, she started up Leiden University Press, a new [digital] imprint for dissemination of academic research materials at Leiden. Since 2008, AUP is coordinator of the EU funded project, Open Access Publishing in European Networks (www.oapen.org). She is a fellow of the Koninklijke Hollandsche Maatschappij der Wetenschappen (Royal Dutch Society of Sciences), of the Maatschappij der Nederlandse Letteren (Society of Netherlandic Literature) and on the board of the National Museum of Natural History and EIFL.

Photo by Sebastiaan ter Burg.

During the Digital Enclosures session, Saskia De Vries, a strong believer in the creative commons, offers us the Amsterdam University Press’ point of view. She ponders whether it is appropriate to divide the publishing world into three categories and concludes that the answer is yes, because of different markets, content and types of authors.

De Vries discusses how the funders of academic research allocate funds and thus define scholarly communication and publishing. She believes that in the Open Access Publishing model, ‘authors pay’ should still be implemented, specifically in the realms of the humanities and social sciences. The Amsterdam University Press publication model aims toward a hybrid model of publishing- combining Open Access, traditional print, ebooks or PoD.

De Vries condemns the recent trend of glamorizing the author in popular culture. She stresses the fact that authors should not behave like performers, but instead should remain outside of the public eye to do what they do best, write. She criticizes the celebritization of authors claiming that it produces “rubbish texts”.

She concludes by applauding the Internet for its democratizing abilities, for it allows different countries to advance and alter their status on the global playing field.

For more information, please visit http://www.aup.nl/do.php?a=show_visitor_home&l=2

The Rietveld videos for the Unbound Book

Posted: May 25, 2011 at 3:04 pm  |  By: gerlofdonga  | 

Students of the Gerrit Rietveld Academie made video introductions for the sessions and workshops of the Unbound Book conference. The Graphic Design students developed the videos during the Interaction Design course by Luna Maurer and Roel Wouters.

The first video introduced the audience to the first workshop on Thursday: ‘Open Publishing Tools’. The video is called ‘Sharing is Caring’.

To see the rest of the videos, click below:

Read the rest of this entry »

Henry Warwick: Digital Enclosures

Posted: May 25, 2011 at 12:20 pm  |  By: gerlofdonga  |  Tags: , , , , ,

Henry Warwick is an artist, composer and scientist who received his BFA from Rutgers University in Visual Systems Studies, a major of his own invention. Henry received an MFA in Interdisciplinary Art from Goddard College. He is assistant professor in Communication Theory and Digital Media at Ryerson University, in Toronto, Ontario.

Warwick discusses ‘atok’ or access to knowledge, which represents the public’s fundamental right to knowledge. He uses the example of AAAAARG which uploads texts in PDF form for people to download and allows for comment, discussion and community formation. This is an example of a platform which has the ability to disseminate information around the world, however, the content may be ephemeral. The main issue here is access to knowledge.

Henry Warwick explains how citizens are ultimately being charged enormous amounts of money for access to knowledge. He describes this disconnect in academic publishing.

He also notes that the web is no longer resilient, it used to be thought of as a tough structure that was impermeable, however in reality, it is very precarious. The recent events in Egypt and the shutting down of the web exemplify this. This is frightening because it represents an end to net neutrality, a construct which was believed to be a fundamental attribute of the internet. Other possible issues mentioned include: file formats and spotlight citations.

Warwick concludes that the hard drive has great advantages over the internet because he believes that it is more durable due to the fact that one cannot shut it down.

For more information, please visit http://www.henrywarwick.com/