The ugly one #latfh

February 12, 2011 § Leave a comment

"Who's that?"

"The Arcade Fire."

"Oh. I didn't know they looked like that."

"Yeah."

"Broken Social Scene's the pretty one?"

“Talking about books sells books.”

February 9, 2011 § Leave a comment

This is the first time I've been quoted in a newspaper. 

A freebie for Google

January 23, 2011 § Leave a comment

Eric’s out, Larry’s in, and everyone’s armchair quarterbacking through the last few years.

So here’s a play as I would have called it.

Buzz should have been rolled out by invitation, just like Gmail and Wave. Remember how excited people were to be get a look at those? Sure, Wave’s dead now, but it would have been DOA if the whole world had at it on day 1. With Wave and Gmail, Google showed rare canniness about how to spread free new technologies while benefiting from early user feedback. Start with a savvy user base that’s keen to get a look at your stuff and build in the kind of scarcity that comes with beta testing. Let friends tell friends at a trickle. Work out the kinks in semi-shadow, then roll out a near-perfect product to masses who are itching to do what the mavens have been buzzing about. 

I would have launched Buzz by dropping invitations into the Gmail accounts of users of Google Reader, aka. the user group who’s going to be filling Buzz with content that will be of interest to their friends, aka. the people next in line for invitations to Buzz.

Instead, Buzz was turned on, maddeningly, for everyone at once, virtually guaranteeing that mutual bewilderment between users whose clothes might as well have vanished spontaneously and simultaneously would completely overshadow the contributions of a tiny number active users who were filling the channel with interesting content. From the start, Buzz wasn’t a place where you shared cool stuff with your friends; it was a goddamn Hieronymus Bosch painting most of us wanted to escape.

Why, of all the missteps Google’s taken over the past few years, do I care so much about Buzz? Because the other news this week out of Google is that they knocked the link for Reader into the miscellaneous “more” drop-down in Gmail, and shared content Reader is most of what you’ll find in my Buzz feed. It’s absurd that while people fumble with various solutions for keeping up with content delivered through Twitter and Facebook, RSS, a mature technology that Google Reader manages magnificently, is put out to pasture. Buzz could easily have been positioned as a gateway to Google Reader and an opening up of RSS to the masses. But Google’s been inconsistent on demonstrating an understanding of how social networks actually work, and so much the worse for Gmail-using Facebookers and Twitterers whose lives would have been improved (horizons broadened, minds expanded, etc.) by the 5-minute tutorial on RSS they’re never going to get.

Will eBooks Change Regional Distribution Rights?

January 20, 2011 § Leave a comment

While book publishers are used to the distribution rights based on region, consumers are not. And as shopping for eBooks is more about being online than what region of the world you are in, publishers may have to come up with a new model for international eBook rights.

In a Kindle forum this week, Amazon customers expressed frustration at the inability to buy Kindle books from the Amazon UK site (which is fully accessible in the US) to read on their Kindle in the U.S.

James Scott wrote: “Right then. I was trying to get a few of the UK titles to read on my Kindle on PC. I live in the US and it refused to sell me the titles I wanted. What I want to know is ‘why’? Why can’t I buy from the UK site? There are some authors who sell exclusively in the UK market and that’s what I was after. Does anyone know the answer to this question?”

Mira Kolar-Brown, wrote: “It very much depends on publishing and distribution rights for individual books. Most indie/self published kindle or tree books are available on both UK and US sites, but publishing houses have to abide by a variety of rules.”

One poster named cynthia wrote: “For some idiotic reason the ‘Point of Sale’ for ebooks is the customer’s location not the stores’. So if a U.K. publisher has only a U.K. copyright he can only sell to people IN the U.K. not to people in the U.S. Stupid law. The point of sale should be the location of the seller not the buyer but that’s the way it is right now.”

How do you think publishers can resolve these regional barriers and sell books worldwide?

To answer the question posed in the headline, not as long as there’s money to be made in the sale of territorial rights.

Don’t beat up on the publisher who won’t sell you the book where you are. Set your sights on the one who’s selling the print book where you live and not supplying ebooksellers in your region with an ebook.

VE1: Tristram Shandy, by Laurence Sterne [Process] – a set on Flickr

January 19, 2011 § Leave a comment

Adult Paperback Sales Down 19% in November – GalleyCat

January 15, 2011 § Leave a comment

aaplogo.jpgAccording to Association of American Publishers (AAP) sales figures, adult paperback sales sagged 19 percent in November. At the same time, overall sales rose by 5.1 percent compared to the same period the previous year, totaling $852 million.

In addition, hardcover Children’s/YA sales decreased 2.7 percent in November and paperback sales in the same category decreased by 5.5 percent in November compared to the same period the previous year. Update: eBookNewser has more about eBook sales for the month.

Here’s more from the release: “The Adult Hardcover category was up 4.3 percent in November with sales of $219.9 million, although sales for the year-to-date were down by 6.1 percent. Adult Paperback sales decreased 19.0 percent for the month ($80.8 million) revealing a decrease of 1.4 percent for the year to date. Adult Mass Market sales decreased 9.5 percent for November with sales totaling $47.7 million; sales were down by 14.0 percent year to date.”

Where did they go?

*burp*

“Did you read…?”

January 14, 2011 § Leave a comment

The Marketing Department’s Wife

January 14, 2011 § 3 Comments

Photo_4

In defence of Chapters – EYE WEEKLY

January 7, 2011 § Leave a comment

Because sometimes you just want to be in a bookstore without all the assholes you find in bookstores.

 

Which of these books will stop a bullet?

January 3, 2011 § Leave a comment

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