joseafonsofurtado's posterous http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com Books, reading and publishing in a digital era, as well as other media and new ICTs. (In Portuguese,English, French,Spanish and Italian). posterous.com Fri, 01 Jan 2010 16:08:15 -0800 France : Le livre numérique ne fait pas recette… pour l’instant http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/france-le-livre-numerique-ne-fait-pas-recette http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/france-le-livre-numerique-ne-fait-pas-recette

- les drm
- le prix
- le refus de tout modèle d’abonnement (notamment via bibliothèques)

et deuxième point, essentiel : comment le numérique, changeant le rapport du langage au monde, pourrait s’établir sur des formes artistiques issues d’un modèle précédent ? – je doute que ce soit les objets marchands d’aujourd’hui qui émergent comme nos objets de réflexion et désir demain...»

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
Tue, 10 Nov 2009 03:32:18 -0800 Want To Sell Books? Start Gathering Fans, by Richard Nash http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/want-to-sell-books-start-gathering-fans-by-ri http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/want-to-sell-books-start-gathering-fans-by-ri

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Book Expo America, the largest book convention in the US, and one of the largest in the world, announced that they'd dropped plans to have the exhibits open on Tuesday, the day before the convention opens.

http://mhpbooks.com/mobylives/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/bookexpo_america.gif

Richard Nash has an insightful article on Huffington Post on the matter (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/richard-nash/want-to-sell-books-start_b_350845.html).

He stresses two decisive points:

·         «Books was once a business where publishers sold to booksellers, and booksellers sold to readers. So BEA was an event where publishers sold to booksellers.

But with the chains not needing an event to meet everyone, since everyone beats a path to their door, and with the explosion in the number of books available means that publishers need to motivate readers to read their books, and not take for granted they'll walk into bookstores and buy, the event needs to be about exciting readers/customers, not hustling the retailers.» (bold emphasis mine)

 

·         «The publishing business is not in trouble because there's no demand for books. It is in trouble because there are changes afoot in how best to satisfy the demand, changes to which there are suitable responses, two of which are:

o    fostering fan culture and

o    generating a sense of occasion,

and the leaders of the largest publishing organizations are failing in their professional responsibility to implement these responses. By reducing their participation in BEA at the same time the media participation has increased by almost 50%, by refusing to open the Fair to the readers on Sunday, these CEOs have effectively thrown in the towel. They are managing the demise of the book business, pointing fingers at any generic social forces they can find, failing to see the one place the responsibility can be found, their own damn offices.» (bold emphasis mine).

Who would say it better?

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
Wed, 04 Nov 2009 04:45:06 -0800 How long can Amazon.com put off paying its bills? http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/how-long-can-amazoncom-put-off-paying-its-bil http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/how-long-can-amazoncom-put-off-paying-its-bil

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A Wall Street Journal report by Martin Peers (http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125682780621816085.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_LEFTTopStories) details some of the secret tactics used by Amazon.com, a company which has never made a profit, to control the book industry by simply delaying payment of its debts , as says Dennis Johnson at MobyLives.

According to Peers, it isn't a secret that Amazon's financial success is partly based on its ability to take in money for selling merchandise before it has to pay its suppliers.

But lately Amazon has gone one better: «steadily lengthening the time it takes to pay suppliers. That has been a factor behind the retailer's soaring cash flow.»

Amazon has lengthened is “account-payable” delays — 30 days for most of the known world — from an initial 49 days in 2003 to 72 days today.

[Amazon]

As Brian Evans, an analyst for research firm Behind the Numbers, notes, this "theoretically means that Amazon has not paid suppliers for sales consummated in mid-June."  Amazon's sales rose 28% in the quarter, but accounts payable nearly doubled, helping push free cash flow up 116%.

Averaged through the year, «Amazon's accounts-payable days have risen from 49.25 days in 2003 to 59 last year before jumping this year to an average of 64.6. Free cash flow has risen to $1.36 billion in 2008 from $346 million in 2003», says Peers.

Such efficient working-capital management is to be envied. But investors shouldn't get too used to it. Amazon can't keep extending payment terms with its vendors indefinitely. When it stops, one source of free cash-flow growth will disappear, stresses Martin Peers.

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Charles Mulford, an accounting professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology, notes how sharply boosting accounts payable helped Robert Nardelli transform Home Depot's cash generation after he took charge at the end of 2000. The retailer went from reporting negative free cash flow to $2.57 billion in fiscal 2002. But gains from working-capital efficiency petered out.

Such things won't flow Amazon's way forever.

 

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
Tue, 03 Nov 2009 08:52:06 -0800 IPhone challenge to Kindle http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/iphone-challenge-to-kindle http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/iphone-challenge-to-kindle

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According to The Bookseller (http://www.thebookseller.com/news/101600-iphone-challenge-to-kindle-as-book-apps-surge.html)  the iPhone may take market share from the Amazon Kindle, following an explosion in the supply of book apps last month.

The Bookseller quotes a a report by San Francisco-based mobile application analytics company Flurry.

The Flurry report, «Flurry Smartphone Industry Pulse, October 2009», Posted by Peter Farago  (http://blog.flurry.com/bid/27796/Flurry-Smartphone-Industry-Pulse-October-2009), reveals that he number of book apps supplied to the iPhone App Store overtook the number of games apps for the first time in September.

 

After Playing Games, iPhone Gets Serious about Books

According to Flurry, «The iPhone is a versatile multi-media device that has already significantly impacted the business models of music, games and other Media & Entertainment industry categories. In particular, since Apple launched the App Store in July 2008, game developers have flocked to the iPhone, creating an alternative for consumers to the leading handheld gaming platform, Nintendo DS.»

So, to predict which sector of Media & Entertainment iPhone might next impact, Flurry researched the number of applications released to the App Store, by category, since its inception. From August 2008 to August 2009, more apps were released in the Games category than any other. This September, however, «we observed another category, Books, usurping Games for the first time ever. To illustrate the surge in the supply of books to the App Store, the chart below compares the number of books and games released to the App Store per month, over the last four months, as a percentage of all released applications.»

In October, one out of every five new apps launching in the iPhone has been a book. Publishers of all kinds, from small ones like Your Mobile Apps to mega-publishers like Softbank, are porting existing IP into the App Store at record rates. (bold highlight mine)

In its August Pulse report, Flurry  observed that during the month of August 1% of the entire U.S. population was already reading a book on the iPhone. Now, with books shipping in droves, we are seeing the supply-side explode.

The sharp rise in eBook activity on the iPhone indicates that «Apple is positioned take market share from the Amazon Kindle as it did from the Nintendo DS. Despite the smaller form factor of the display, we predict that the iPhone will be a significant player in the book category of the Media & Entertainment space. Further, with Apple working on a larger tablet form factor, running on the iPhone OS, we believe Jeff Bezos and team will face significant competition», Flurry reported.

 There is another interesting point in the report, related with consumer loyalty.

Addicted to iPhone Apps? There's an App for That. 

In its August Pulse report, Flurry reviewed consumer loyalty by looking at how long and how frequently consumers used their downloaded applications.

This time around, we're escalating the conversation from retention to outright addiction. The chart below depicts growth of what the report call the "Addict" segment, «consumers that use an application more than 100 times per month, or more than three times each day of the month. These are the most active users Flurry tracks, and they fire up their applications more than 10 times more often than the average user, who access their applications around 8 times per month.» 

In July, Flurry rebealed that more than  3 million people read usually  on the iPhone.

Now, the graph above shows significant growth in the Addict segment over the past six months.

In September, 1.2% of the more than 40 million users Flurry tracked, or roughly one half of a million, used apps more than 100 times per month. There is no denying the level of addiction iPhone users are demonstrating around app usage, says the report. 

Last week Benedicte Page  wrote at The Bookseller a piece, “Move quick on apps or lose out, warning to publishers (http://www.thebookseller.com/news/101468-move-quick-on-apps-or-lose-out-warning-to-publishers.html) where revealed that slow-moving publishers could be left out of the "explosion" in demand for the creation of book applications for the Apple iPhone and iPod Touch. Adam Martin, head of the interactive department at United Agents, said apps were a "game-changer" for authors and publishers. He warned that publishers needed to move "within the next six months". "If they are slow, they may get left out," he said.

(The data in this report is computed from a sample size of over 2,500 applications, 40 million consumers and 4 platforms: Apple (iPhone and iPod Touch), Blackberry, JavaME and Google Android.)

However, «while it might be true that the number of Book apps is growing at a faster rate, Games continue to dominate the list of popular U.S. iTunes Apps. Games accounted for about a fifth of all iTunes apps over the past week, but the category continued to have a disproportionate share of the Top 100 charts, accounting for 52% of the Top Grossing, 56% of the Top Paid, and 50% of the Top Free apps», says Ben Lorica from O’Reilly – “Games Top the Charts in the iPhone and Android App Markets” (http://radar.oreilly.com/2009/11/games-top-the-charts-iphone-android-markets.html):

pathint


Lorica emphasizes that «Since most Book apps are actually individual e-books, the Gaming category would have a hard time keeping up with the ever increasing number of Books. Once publishers figured out how to turn their titles into iPhone apps, the number of Book apps started growing faster than Games. Nevertheless Games continue to rule the Top 100 charts»

On the other hand, David Coursey, from PC World, says that «just because developers are creating book applications for iPhone does not mean Apple's handset threatens Amazon's Kindle or B&N's Nook e-readers

In his pice “iPhone e-Books Don't Threaten Kindle Or Nook” (http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/181166/iphone_ebooks_dont_threaten_kindle_or_nook.html), Coursey’s rationale:

·         At the very least, there is the issue that books are easy to port to the iPhone when compared to the difficulty of developing games. It is no surprise that there would be more books developed, provided developers can make money doing so;

·         «I have already downloaded (and paid for) several iPhone books, but they are all reference material. Not things that I would spend a long time reading in a single sitting (…) Because of its small screen, I cannot imagine reading hundreds of pages on an iPhone, something the Nook and Kindle make quite pleasant.»

·         That is a very different market and use model than what the Nook, Kindle, and (perhaps) the widely rumored Apple tablet address: «iPhone books fulfill a different purpose, I think, than books on the dedicated e-reader devices. If I were Amazon or Barnes & Noble, I would be much more worried about the other and emerging e-reader companies that I would be about the iPhone.»

John Herrman from Gizmodo, in his piece “iPhone Ebooks: The New Fart Apps” (http://gizmodo.com/5395396/iphone-ebooks-the-new-fart-apps ) sems to agree: « the data shows a clear rise in ebook apps over the last few months, such that they account for a staggering number of the new apps showing up in the store. It's true! (…)  But here's the thing: this is purely a measure of how many new apps there are,   not how well they're doing. But still, why such a huge uptick? Let's do a little experiment:

Pick your favorite public domain book. No, scratch that, pick your least favorite public domain book—something you had to read back in freshman year of college, and that you immediately and angrily sold back to the campus bookstore. Now, search for it in the App Store. Here's our answer:


«Treasure Island, a free, public domain book, is available for purchase as a standalone app from over a dozen different developers, in all kinds of containers, at all kinds of prices. And why not! the content is free, so once developer has designed an ebook app container, he can just paste any public domain etext in there and throw it into the App Store. I have no idea if these things sell, but to be honest, they wouldn't have to do very well to make money for their developers—the investment is minimal.»

His conclusion: « Even more to the point, if the iPhone really starts to pose a threat to tradition ereaders, it won't be evident in stats like this—it'll be through increased book downloads in all-in-one ereader apps, like Amazon's Kindle, B&N's Reader and unaffiliated apps like eReader and Stanza. That's a real possibility, but for now, we should call this rapid explosion of redundant, overpriced, exploitative apps like we see it.» (my bold emphasis)

However, as Nicholas Clee points (“IPhone ebook apps proliferate”: http://bookbrunch.co.uk/index.php?option=com_myblog&show=IPhone-ebook-apps-proliferate.html&Itemid=71 ): «the problem remains: while reading devices cost  $200 or more, and while they perform a single function, they will reach only a limited audience

We must be caucious interpretating the “proliferation” of ebook apps for the  iPhone. We know  almost nothing about the presence of the last titles under copyright.  More: what about the reading practices of the iPhone users? That’s an essential point in thinking about the conundrum of the book for tomorrow.

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
Thu, 29 Oct 2009 09:49:38 -0700 Roy DeCarava dies at 89 http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/roy-decarava-dies-at-89 http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/roy-decarava-dies-at-89

Roy Rudolph DeCarava (December 9, 1919 – October 27, 2009) was an African American photographer. Born in Harlem, lived there through many decades of important changes and development to the neighborhood. In DeCarava’s childhood, the Harlem Renaissance gave prominence to many black artists, musicians and writers.

He always lived in New York City and almost always has photographed there, creating from his immediate world the world of his art. He found his poetic voice almost as soon as he picked up a camera, in the late 1940s, and has never diverged from it, wrote Peter Galassi in the Introduction to Roy Decarava: A Retrospective (Museum of Modern Art New York, NY 1996).

DeCarava   photographed Harlem during the 1940s, ’50s and ’60s with an insider’s view of the subway stations, restaurants, apartments and especially the people who lived in the predominantly African American neighborhood.  

Roy DeCarava, Graduation, 1949

Graduation, 1949


 

 

He also was well known for his candid shots of jazz musicians — many of them taken in smoky clubs using only available light. Shadow and darkness became hallmarks of DeCarava’s style. (Mary Rourke, Los Angeles Times:  http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/arts/la-me-roy-decarava29-2009oct29,0,341609,full.story

 

                                                                                                             Coltrane on soprano, 1963, Roy DeCarava

 

http://www.billieholidaysongs.com/58-05_BH_mal_waldron.jpg

Billie Holiday and Mal Waldron at the piano, 1958

DeCarava was a painter and graphic artist before turning to photography, what does much to explain the strong lines, extraordinarily rich tonality, and dramatic exploitation of light in his photos. Their emotional charge, however, arises from the social choices DeCarava made for his career.

DeCarava told National Public Radio in a 1996 interview that when he started taking pictures "there were no black images of dignity, no images of beautiful black people. There was this big hole. I tried to fill it."

If there were few images of beautiful black people before DeCarava made them, there were also few black photographers who had achieved wide recognition.

Gordon Parks, seven years older than DeCarava, broke the color line in photojournalism in the 1940s, shooting for Life, Look and other national magazines. James VanDerZee became known beyond the black community for his portraits of middle-class African Americans that offer glimpses into Harlem in the 1920s and '30s. But DeCarava's interest in photography as art led him in another direction, says Mary Rourke.

Using a small, 35-millimeter camera that allowed him freedom to roam, DeCarava captured spontaneous moments. He shot in black and white, creating highly impressionistic images, and printed in a style that produced velvety shades of gray and black.

DeCarava was the first black photographer to receive the grant, in 1952. He used the $3,200 to support himself during his first year of photographing in Harlem.

The images he took that year became a book, "The Sweet Flypaper of Life" (1955), with text by Langston Hughes, the foremost black poet of his time.

The same year  DeCarava opened A Photographer's Gallery at his home, an important New York City gallery pioneering an effort to win recognition for photography as a fine art,  that remained open for more than two years.

DeCarava's first major exhibit was at the Museum of Photographic Arts in San Diego in 1986. Ten years later, he was the subject of a one-man exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.

"At the heart of DeCarava's photography is an aesthetic of patient contemplation. It is common that we say to ourselves (or to others) that our lives would be richer if we could only slow down, if we could take time to savor and consider, if we would attend to our own backyards. DeCarava's work achieves this reflective state of grace, in the way he looks at the world and in the way his pictures invite us to look at them. He loves the luxurious subtlety of photography's infinitely divisible scale of grays, and it pleases him when viewers feel obliged to pause and peer closely into the dense but articulate shadows of his pictures. Having paused, the viewer has entered DeCarava's world.”, said Galassi.

 

Roy DeCarava, Freedom.

Roy DeCarava, Mississippi Freedom Marcher, Washington, D.C., 1963

"Whatever's there, I use it," DeCarava said of his work in a 1996 interview with National Public Radio. "I improvise. Improvisation is all about individual interpretations, individual expression. And that's what I'm doing

 

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
Sun, 25 Oct 2009 16:55:49 -0700 HP and the University of Michigan deal http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/hp-and-the-university-of-michigan-deal http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/hp-and-the-university-of-michigan-deal

HP and the University of Michigan have inked a deal that will see HP reprinting rare and out-of-print books from Michigan's library via the printer maker's print-on-demand service.

In a retro twist on the Google Books idea, HP has announced (Press Release: HP Makes Rare and Hard-to-find Books Available Through Collaboration with University of Michigan: http://www.hp.com/hpinfo/newsroom/press/2009/091021xc.html) a partnership with the University of Michigan library to sell physical copies of over 500,000 rare and out-of-print works, while making the digital versions available online for free.

HP's BookPrep service (HP BookPrep is  a cloud computing service that enables on-demand printing of books – brings new life to the traditional publishing model, making it possible to bring any book ever published back into print through an economical and sustainable service model)currently in beta, will take in raw scans of books, clean them up to prepare them for re-printing, and then offer print-on-demand copies for sale via normal online book distribution channels like Amazon. This new arrangement mixes a number of aspects of existing efforts like Google Books and current print-on-demand (PoD) offerings, while being a little different from either, and in the process it points the way to a real future for the digital contents of libraries' special collections.

Jon Stokes (from Ars Technica) says this is "potentially as important as anything Google Books is doing." (http://arstechnica.com/media/news/2009/10/-in-a-novel-retro.ars?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss)

Here is the rationale:

  • All scanned in and no place to go

«The first way in which the HP/Michigan deal differs from Google Books is that HP itself is not doing the scanning. Instead, HP is taking advantage of the rare book scanning efforts that are already underway at Michigan—HP just takes Michigan's raw scans and turns them back into books. This basic idea has much wider applicability than just at Michigan, since libraries across the country are currently in the process of digitizing their special collections.»

The PoD aspect of the HP/Michigan effort isn't just about making books available in a convenient, universally accessible format—it's also part of the printer maker's ongoing attempt to keep people printing in the face of the nascent e-paper and e-book revolution. 

"People around the world still value reading books in print," said Andrew Bolwell, HP's director of New Business Initiatives, in a press releases. HP clearly hopes that this statement will continue to hold true for some time to come.

  • Not ordinary PoD

HP's BookPrep is by no means the only PoD service in the world, nor is HP the only on-demand printer. PoD services like Hulu.com and Apple's iPhoto books have deals with on-demand printers that do the actual printing, binding, and shipping for them, and most large printing houses, like R.R. Donnelly, have print-on-demand services in addition to their traditional presses.

However, «what separates BookPrep from the rest is that normal PoD shops take in only print-ready digital files, usually PDFs. BookPrep, in contrast, will take high-resolution scans that aren't fit to print, and automatically clean them up for printing. Take a look at the examples below from HP's BookPrep website (http://www.bookprep.com/), where the original scan is on top and the print-ready copy is below it.

An example of BookPrep's automated image processing. Source: HP BookPrep

This presentation problem is currently the number one barrier to getting most of the aforementioned special collections' material on the Web, even if the institutions that produced the scans could afford to host them (which they can't). Making an interface that lets you usefully interact with high-resolution scans of papyri, books, handwritten notes, photographs, and the like is a massive undertaking, and there currently exists no off-the-shelf package designed specifically for this purpose, says Jon Stokes.

Hopefully, HP will announce more such deals in the near future, because there are plenty more institutions that would love to take the terabytes of raw, high-resolution scans that are sitting on dusty hard drives and make them available to the viewing public.

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
Tue, 20 Oct 2009 05:54:19 -0700 Children distracted from reading by TV and computers & a comment by Chris Meade http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/children-distracted-from-reading-by-tv-and-co http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/children-distracted-from-reading-by-tv-and-co

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Booktrust carried out a Research into children’s reading habits for its free books programmes, Booktime and Booked Up projects, which will involve the distribution of 2m free books.

Some 1,772 UK parents of primary school aged children and 1,318 children aged 5-12 years took part in the research.

Most children, 74%, said they were the key decision maker when it comes to choosing which books to read, while 15% said their mum decided what they read, 5% said teachers and only 3% their dads.

The research also indicated a clear gender split. Parents and carers of boys were twice as likely not to read with them compared to those who have girls, and households with girls have ten more children’s books than those with boys. One in every 20 family homes in Britain today has fewer than ten books. One in every 12 children said that they rarely or never saw their parents or carers reading for pleasure.


Chris Meade, Director of if:book london («a think and do tank exploring the future of the book as our culture moves from printed page to networked screen, and the potential of new media for creative readers and writers») has an incisivel comment at Bookfutures (http://bookfutures.blogspot.com/2009/10/statistics.html)

            «So does this research assume that facing a screen doesn't involve reading - or   writing? And did they really "admit they were distracted" by Tv and games, or do they just like doing them? I hereby admit I was distracted from sleeping last night by the book I was reading. »

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http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
Tue, 20 Oct 2009 04:08:34 -0700 Pearson 2009 Interim results http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/pearson-2009-interim-results http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/pearson-2009-interim-results

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According to Reuters Pearson raises guidance as education excels. The British publishing group  (PSON.L) raised its full-year guidance on Tuesday, saying it now expects adjusted earnings to be at or above 60 pence per share following a strong performance from its education business.

Kate Holton from Reuters quotes Numis analysts that said "Pearson has raised its guidance by 10 percent this year," and that "Q4 remains important, and for Pearson to raise guidance again at this stage indicates to us that this guidance (and our forecasts) are still likely to prove conservative."

 

UBS also said it saw further upside potential to forecasts.

Reuters also emphasizes that «Pearson, the world's largest education publisher and the owner of The Financial Times and Penguin Books, said nine-month sales were up 2 percent at constant exchange rates after the group traded ahead of expectations.»

 

Despite the tough economic environment, the FT Group and Penguin performed in line with expectations after benefiting from investments in digital products and emerging markets.

"We began 2009 in a cautious mood, wary of the impact of the global economic crisis on our company," Chief Executive Marjorie Scardino said in a statement. "We have now seen enough of it to say that, though no part of Pearson has been untouched, the company as a whole has proved its strength."

 

Education and 'good publishing' at Penguin drive Pearson

Bookseller’s Graeme Neill thinks that « Education and 'good publishing' at Penguin drive Pearson.

STRENGTH IN EDUCATION

 

Also Reuters says that in education, Pearson gained share and grown faster than expected in North America, with growth of 4 percent at constant exchange rates.

 

Analysts attributed the growth to a good performance in testing, taking market share gains from struggling rivals and margin benefits from previous acquisitions and restructuring.

 

Although The U.S. school publishing industry remained under pressure due to weaker state budgets « Pearson managed to outperform the market and deliver its strongest overall competitive performance for a decade. The higher education business was also described as having "an exceptional year".

 

International education sales were up 10 percent due to the demand for assessment services, higher education materials and digital learning tools. Professional education, which includes sectors such as nursing and training, saw sales down 1 percent, writes Kate Holton.

'Good publishing' at Penguin

 

-->

 

 

Penguin has seen double-digit growth in the first nine months of 2009, according to a trading update from its parent Pearson.

Graeme Neill says that Penguin's sales were up 12%, but declined by 4% at constant exchange rates and by 2% on an underlying basis. Pearson said that tough retail conditions were offset by a "good publishing performance". It said e-book sales grew four-fold over the period with more than 12,000 Penguin e-books now available.

The Press release from Pearson stresses some:

 

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Penguin's first-half highlights include:

  • In the US, Penguin led the industry for #1 New York Times bestsellers in the first half. Penguin's 18 #1 bestsellers included titles from established authors such as Greg Mortenson with Three Cups of Tea, Charlaine Harris' Dead and Gone, Nora Roberts' Vision in White, Harlan Coben's Long Lost and Sarah Dessen's Along for the Ride.  We helped turn debut novelists Kathryn Stockett, with The Help, and Janice K. Lee, with The Piano Teacher, into national New York Times bestsellers.
  • In the UK, #1 bestsellers included Jamie Oliver's Ministry of Food, Antony Beevor's D-Day and Marian Keyes' This Charming Man. At the Nibbies, Penguin won the Marketing Campaign of the Year for Sebastian Faulks' Devil May Care (which won the Sainsbury's Popular Fiction Award at the Galaxy British Book Awards).
  • In Australia, Penguin was named Publisher of the Year for the second year running at the Australian Book Industry Awards (and won half of the awards for individual books). #1 best-sellers from Australian authors included Tom Winton (Breath) and Bryce Courtenay (Fishing for Stars) alongside international authors including Jamie Oliver (Ministry of Food).
  • In Canada, Penguin author Joseph Boyden won Fiction Book of the Year and Author of the Year at the Canadian Booksellers Association 2009 awards with Through Black Spruce.
  • In India, Penguin is the largest English language trade publisher, with bestselling authors in the first half of 2009 including Narayana Murthy, Dipankar Gupta and Nandan Nilekani. Penguin Books India launched e-commerce functionality on its website (www.penguinbooksindia.com) in partnership with Indiaplaza and won the Best Book award in two out of the three major categories (Jury) at the Vodafone Crossword national book awards with Amitav Ghosh's best-selling epic saga Sea of Poppies, which was named joint winner of the Best Book (Fiction) award, and Manohar Shyam Joshi's T'ta Professor (translated by Ira Pande) won the Best Book in Translation award.
  • In China, Penguin signed an agreement with Apabi to become the first International trade publisher to sell titles as eBooks in the market.
  • A strong second half publishing list is led by major new books in the US, including titles by Patricia Cornwell, Sue Grafton and Anthony Zuiker. The US also has new works by David Plouffe, Greg Mortenson and David Benedictus & Mark Burgess with Return to the Hundred Acre Wood, the first authorised sequel to A.A. Milne's Winnie the Pooh and The House at Pooh Corner. Penguin UK has works by Nick Hornby, Eoin Colfer, Marina Lewycka, Vladimir Nabokov, Jamie Oliver, Lauren Child and Charlie Higson.

Digital innovation

  • Significant expansion of eBook publishing and sales. In the US and UK, Penguin has almost 10,000 eBooks available to date and expects to have almost 14,000 by year end including eSpecials and Enriched eBook Classics.
  • In the US, Penguin launched an online network with three channels featuring nine series of book-related programming for adults, young adults and children. Titled "From the Publishers Office", the site aims to build on Penguin's 2.0 initiatives to engage new audiences and to enhance the dialogue between authors and readers.
  • In the UK, Penguin and Puffin launch We Make Stories, a unique set of digital tools for children to create, print and share a variety of innovative story forms including pop-up books, customised audio books, comics and interactive treasure maps. The site is designed to encourage literacy, creativity and storytelling skills and is Penguin's first move into providing services. We launched iPhone applications for the Top 10 DK Eyewitness travel guides retailing at £4.99.
  • Penguin China is the first major international publisher to sell English books directly under its own brand on Taobao (http://shop37092254.taobao.com/ ), the leading direct-to-consumer online auction site in China.

 

LINKS

 

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Mon, 19 Oct 2009 17:12:17 -0700 Nancy Spero Dies at Age 83 http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/nancy-spero-dies-at-age-83 http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/nancy-spero-dies-at-age-83

"I have deliberately attempted to distance my art from the Western emphasis on the subjective portrayal of individuality by using a hand-printing and collage technique utilizing zinc plates as an artist's tool instead of a brush or palette knife. Figures derived from various cultures co-exist in simultaneous time... The figures themselves could become hieroglyphs--extensions of a text denoting rites of passage, birth to old age, motion and gesture...Woman as activator or protagonist dancing in procession, elegiac or celebrator a continuous presence, engaged directly or glimpsed peripherally; the eye, as a moving camera, scans the re-imaging of women."


Nancy Spero from an unpublished 1989 statement by the artist entitled "The Continuous Presence."

 

Nancy Spero (1926 - October 18, 2009) was an American artist born in Cleveland, Ohio.

 

Nancy_Spero1


Spero earned a B.F.A. from the Art Institute of Chicago in 1949, and lived in Chicago with her husband, the painter Leon Golub (1922–2004) in the early 1950s (where both were associated with the Monster Ronster group of Chicago artists, which also included Don Baum and H.C. Westermann) before moving to Paris to study painting at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and at the Atelier of Andre Lhote, an early Cubist painter, teacher and critic.

Spero and Golub returned to New York in 1964, where the couple remained to live and work

An activist and early feminist, Spero was a member of the Art Workers Coalition (1968-69), Women Artists in Revolution (1969), and in 1972 she was a founding member of the first women’s cooperative gallery, A.I.R. (Artists in Residence) in SoHo. (Wikipedia)

Studio of Nancy

According to Bookforum, "In 1974, Spero chose to focus on themes involving women and their representation in various cultures; her Torture in Chile, 1974, and the long scroll, Torture of Women, 1976, blend oral testimonies with images of women throughout history, linking the contemporary governmental brutality of Latin American dictatorships (from Amnesty International reports) with the historical repression of women."

Nancy Spero, Torture of Women, handprinting and typewriter collage on paper, 1985-1989

 

ThDeveloping a pictographic language of body gestures and motion, a bodily hieroglyphics, Spero reconstructed the diversity of representations of women from pre-history to the present. From 1976 through 1979, she researched and worked on Notes in Time on Women, a 20 inch by 210 foot paper scroll. She elaborated and amplified this theme in The First Language (1979-81, 20 inches by 190 feet), eschewing text altogether in favor of an irregular rhythm of painted, hand-printed, and collaged figures, thus creating her “cast of characters.” e acknowledgement of Spero’s international status as a preeminent figurative and feminist artist was signaled in 1987 by her traveling retrospective exhibitions in the United States and United Kingdom. By 1988, she developed her first wall installations. For these, Spero extended the picture plane of the scrolls by moving her printed images directly onto the walls of museums and public spaces. (Wikipedia & other sources)

 

Harnessing a capacious imaginative energy and a ferocious will, Spero continued to mine the full range of power relations. In 1987, following retrospective exhibitions in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Canada, the artist created images that leapt from the scroll surface to the wall surface, refiguring representational forms of women over time and engaging in a dialogue with architectural space. Spero’s wall paintings in Chicago, Vienna, Dresden, Toronto, and Derry form poetic reconstructions of the diversity of representations of women from the ancient to the contemporary world, validating a subjectivity of female experience.

 

Spero once wrote, “I’ve always sought to express a tension in form and meaning in order to achieve a veracity. I have come to the conclusion that the art world has to join us, women artists, not we join it. When women are in leadership roles and gain rewards and recognition, then perhaps ‘we’ [women and men] can all work together in art world actions.”

Basic Data:

  • Biography, interviews, essays, artwork images and video clips from PBS series Art:21 -- Art in the Twenty-First Century - Season 4 (2007). Link: http://www.pbs.org/art21/artists/spero/
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    Wed, 14 Oct 2009 17:22:00 -0700 Les Français lisent toujours moins de livres http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/les-francais-lisent-toujours-moins-de-livres http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/les-francais-lisent-toujours-moins-de-livres

    Le Département des études, de la prospective et des statistiques  du Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication vient de publier les résultats de l'enquête 2008 sur Les pratiques culturelles des Français à l’ère numérique, sous la responsabilité de Olivier Donnat.

     

    Comme on peut lire sur le site web créé pour la divulgation des conclusions du travail (http://www.pratiquesculturelles.culture.gouv.fr/index.php), depuis les années 1970, l’enquête Pratiques culturelles «constitue le principal baromètre des comportements des Français dans le domaine de la culture et des médias. Les résultats de 2008 révèlent, plus de dix ans après ceux de 1997, l’ampleur des effets d’une décennie de mutations induites par l’essor de la culture numérique et de l’internet.»

     

    Les résultats ont été présentés à la presse mercredi 14 octobre, et le même jour a été publié le livre Les pratiques culturelles des Français à l’ère numérique, de Olivier Donnat, à la Découverte / Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication (ISBN: 978-2-7071-5800-0).

     

    Selon l’analyse  en ligne de Livres Hebdo (http://www.livreshebdo.fr/actualites/DetailsActuRub.aspx?id=3579#3579),   l’étude confirme l’érosion de la place du livre dans la société:

     

    ·         La proportion des moyens et forts lecteurs a diminué dans la population française, tandis que la part des non-lecteurs et des très faibles lecteurs a augmenté.

     

    En effet, les Éléments de synthèse 1997-2008 (PDF) disponibles sur le site mentionné, confirment cette assertion: «En matière de lecture d’imprimés, les deux principales tendances à l’oeuvre depuis les années 1980 se sont poursuivies au cours de la dernière décennie : la lecture quotidienne de journaux (payants) a continué à diminuer, de même que la quantité de livres lus en dehors de toute contrainte scolaire ou professionnelle.»


    Il s’agit ainsi d’un mouvement de long terme que se poursuit, mettant en évidence la “montée en puissance de la culture d’écran”, par rapport à 1997, lorsque seulement 1% de la population française était équipée d’un accès à Internet, contre 56% aujourd’hui.


    Pourtant,
    l’origine  de cette tendance  est  bien antérieure à l’arrivée de l’internet, mais «a continué à peu près au même rythme que lors de la décennie précédente, entraînant une augmentation de la part des très faibles lecteurs – 1 à 4 livres lus dans l’année – mais aussi des non-lecteurs : il y a aujourd’hui plus de Français à n’avoir lu aucun livre dans le cadre de leur temps libre au cours des douze derniers mois qu’il n’y en avait en 1997, et ceux qui n’ont pas délaissé le monde du livre ont réduit leur rythme de lecture d’environ cinq livres par an.» (p.5).

     

    D’ailleurs, «les Français dans l’ensemble reconnaissent eux-mêmes que leurs relations avec le monde du livre se sont distendues puisque 53% d’entre eux déclarent spontanément lire peu ou pas du tout de livres.» (c’est moi qui souligne)

    Donc, Livres Hebdo signale qu’il n’établit pas un lien de cause à effet entre l’omniprésence des écrans et le recul de la lecture de livres, rappelant aux journalistes que “cette tendance était déjà à l’œuvre dans les années 1990. On ne peut pas interpréter toutes les données à l’aune du numérique.”

    Par exemple, les jeunes en 2008 lisent moins que les jeunes en 1997. Mais, “depuis plusieurs décennies, chaque nouvelle génération arrive à l’âge adulte avec niveau d’engagement dans la lecture inférieur à la précédente, si bien que l’érosion des lecteurs quotidiens de presse et des forts lecteurs de livres s’accompagne d’un vieillissement du lectorat”, écrit Olivier Donnat.


    Cette approche générationnelle ne masque pas des inégalités sociales persistantes. Et les analyses de Bourdieu n’ont rien perdu de leur actualité dans ce domaine, au contraire.


    “Les différences entre milieux sociaux (...) ont eu tendance à se creuser au cours de la dernière décennie du fait du décrochage d’une partie des milieux populaires, notamment ouvrier”, souligne Donnat.


    Par ailleurs, les hommes sont plus nombreux à ne pas lire que les femmes, 62% déclarant lire peu ou pas du tout de livres, contre 46% pour les femmes.

    La baisse de la proportion des forts lecteurs peut s’expliquer par plusieurs facteurs.

     

    ·         D’abord, “un recul de la littérature dans l’ensemble des livres lus. En situation d’enquête, on pense moins à déclarer les livres pratiques, les beaux livres que l’on consulte, les BD...”

    ·         De plus, les gens osent peut-être davantage avouer aujourd’hui qu’ils lisent peu ou pas du tout. (“J’ai toujours pensé qu’une partie de la baisse de la lecture renvoyait probablement à une moindre surdéclaration”, explique le sociologue:

    “Le livre ayant perdu une partie de sa légitimité, notamment chez les jeunes, les gens sont plus enclins à dire qu’ils ne lisent pas.”

     

    Livres Hebdo nous informe que Philippe Chantepie, directeur du DEPS au ministère, a par ailleurs annoncé qu’un colloque international sera organisé en 2010, probablement avec Sciences Po, pour effectuer des comparaisons avec d’autres pays.


    Un ouvrage sur les pratiques culturelles des moins de 18 ans devrait voir le jour au printemps 2010 et sera suivi lui aussi d’un colloque.

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    Wed, 14 Oct 2009 09:35:12 -0700 E-book sales predictions too optimistic http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/e-book-sales-predictions-too-optimistic http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/e-book-sales-predictions-too-optimistic

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    Several forecasts in the last months claimed sales in UK's e-book maket will grow to £710m by 2013, emulating similar forecasts for Us market.

    According to the Bookseller, Ann Betts, commercial director for Nielsen Book, speaking at yesterday's (13th October) Tools of Change conference at the Frankfurt Book Fair, said these figures are "way off”, claiming sales would not climb that high for  "quite some time".

    Ann Betts highlighted three estimates for e-book sales by 2013: «The "high case" estimate was for sales reaching half of the viable e-book market—or number of titles that are available to be formatted into e-books—which is expected to be just over £1.4bn.»

    Catherine Neilan writes at the Bookseller, that Betts acknowledged the rapid growth seen in the digital market in recent years, particularly in the US, citing Citigroup's estimate that 550,000 Kindles had been sold by the end of last year in America, and "various" estimates that put that at 1m this summer. 

    However,  Betts said: "I don't see the UK market going there." She said the "high case" estimate would be "quite a challenge" given the nature of the current print book market, which would require at least 25% of all books to be converted into e-books. [bold mine].

    More, «In order for the market to grow to that size, she argued that 12m devices would have to be sold.  "That's about one-fifth of the UK population, and this is all of the book-buying public," Betts said. [bold mine].

    According yet to  Catherine Neilan & the Bookseller, Betts suggested a number of households would be likely to share devices, as they share books.

    She also referred to a recent study, showing that 35% of UK consumers wanted devices to be priced below £100, but the most persuasive factor was the price of e-books, which was the main concern of almost half (46%) of respondents. "Consumers are exceptionally price sensitive at the moment, and will be for at least two years," she said.

     

    We followed “TOC: E-book sales predictions too optimistic”, by  Catherine Neilan (Bookseller): http://www.thebookseller.com/news/99976-toc-e-book-sales-predictions-too-optimistic.html

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    http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
    Mon, 12 Oct 2009 05:22:50 -0700 UK and Us consumer book buying http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/uk-and-us-consumer-book-buying http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/uk-and-us-consumer-book-buying

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    Bowker’s US-based PubTrack Consumer survey and BML’s Books & Consumer survey just  published a new report.

    As the full report - available from BML - is priced at £150 for trade members, or £250 for the general public, Victoria Gallagher  at the Bookseller gives us  some interesting data:

    ·         Britons are heavier book buyers than Americans: 57% of British consumers purchased one or more books last year, compared with only 50% of Americans surveyed.

    ·         Americans tended to enjoy romance and mystery titles most, with these genres accounting for 57% of all fiction books bought, whereas it makes up just 31% in Britain.

    ·         In Britain, bookshops capture 34% of purchases, whereas in America the internet is the top way to buy books.

     

    Relevant Links:

    Brits bigger book buyers than Americans, by Victoria Gallagher (Bookseller): http://www.thebookseller.com/news/99696-brits-bigger-book-buyers-than-americans.html

    FULL  REPORT to buy at http://www.bookmarketing.co.uk/index.cfm/asset_id,874/index.html

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    http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
    Sat, 10 Oct 2009 18:51:44 -0700 Angela Merkel criticises Google for copyright infringement http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/angela-merkel-criticises-google-for-copyright http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/angela-merkel-criticises-google-for-copyright
    Google search

    In her weekly video podcast, before Tuesday's opening of the Frankfurt Book Fair, German Chancellor Angela Merkel strongly criticised the move of Google to build a massive digital library, saying the Internet should not be exempt from copyright laws.

     

    According to Reuters, Merkel appealed for more international cooperation on copyright protection and said her government opposed Google's drive to scan libraries full of books.

     

    In what the Observer consideres “a remarkable intervention from a leading world politician in a growing dispute about the threat posed by the internet, and Google in particular”, to publishing companies, authors, libraries and also newspapers, Merkel said:

    "The German government has a clear position: copyrights have to be protected in the Internet," adding there are "considerable dangers" for copyright protection in the Internet.

    "That's why we reject the scanning in of books without any copyright protection -- like Google is doing. The government places a lot of weight on this position on copyrights to protect writers in Germany.”

    Merkel backs German book publishers, that have criticised European regulators for failing to oppose the settlement.

    Already in the first days of September the German government had officially expressed its opposition to plans by Google to digitize millions of books. Berlin said the US company's program violates German copyright and privacy laws.

     

    "We hope that the court strikes down the approval of the settlement in the class-action suit, or at least excludes our German authors and publishers from the so-called class so the settlement has no impact on them," German Justice Minister Brigitte Zypries told the Handelsblatt business daily at the time.

     

    Germany was the first government to oppose Google’s program, and filed a 25-page legal brief with the court in New York that is required to give the settlement the go ahead: the DECLARATION of Ministerialdirigent Dr. Johannes Christian Wichard in Opposition re: 179 Memorandum of Law in Opposition. Document filed by Federal Republic of Germany (http://docs.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/new-york/nysdce/1:2005cv08136/273913/180/0.html )

     

    UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

    Case No. 05-cv-8136 (DC)

    MEMORANDUM OF LAW IN OPPOSITION TO THE SETTLEMENT PROPOSAL ON BEHALF OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY

    JurPC Web-Dok. 188/2009, Abs. 1 - 51


     
     
         
     
     

    Hinweis der Redaktion:

    Mit freundlicher Genehmigung des Bundesministeriums der Justiz veröffentlichen wir den Amicus Curiae Brief, den die Bundesregierung in dem Rechtsstreit "The Authors Guild Inc. v. Google Inc." beim United States District Court Southern District of New York eingereicht hat.
     
     
     
      UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
     
     
      Case No. 05-cv-8136 (DC)  
     
      The Authors Guild Inc., Association of American Publishers Inc., et al.,

                                                                                 Plaintiffs,
                                           - v. -

                                           Google Inc.,
                                                                                 Defendant.

     
     
      MEMORANDUM OF LAW IN OPPOSITION TO THE SETTLEMENT PROPOSAL
    ON BEHALF OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY
     
     
      Dated: New York, New York
          August 31, 2009
     

     

    ------------

    Relevant Links

     

    Merkel criticises Google for copyright infringement, by Erik Kirschbaum (Reuters): http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idCNLA63106520091010?rpc=44

    Google digital library plan opposed by Angela Merkel, by Jamie Doward and Paul Harris (Observer): http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2009/oct/11/google-digital-library-merkel-opposition

    Germany calls on US court to reject Google book settlement, by Kate Bowen (DW-WORLD.DE): http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4619278,00.html

    Germany opposes google’s books settlement in us court filing ,by Patrick Smith

    (paid Content): http://paidcontent.org/article/419-germany-opposes-googles-books-settlement-in-us-court-filing/

     

     

     

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    http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
    Sat, 10 Oct 2009 15:29:00 -0700 T-Mobile: we probably lost all your Sidekick data or the dangers of cloud computing http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/t-mobile-we-probably-lost-all-your-sidekick-d-1 http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/t-mobile-we-probably-lost-all-your-sidekick-d-1

    This piece from  Chris Ziegler at Engadget is really frightening:

    T-Mobile's now reporting that personal data stored on Sidekicks has "almost certainly has been lost as a result of a server failure at Microsoft/Danger."

    They're still looking for a way to recover it, but they're not giving users a lot of hope -- meanwhile, servers are still on the fritz and customers are being advised not to let their devices power down because anything that's still on there will be lost the next time the device is turned on.

    As Ziegler writes, "Well, this is shaping up to be one of the biggest disasters in the history of cloud computing, and certainly the largest blow to Danger and the Sidekick platform"

    Another communique is promised from T-Mobile on Monday to give everyone a status update on the recovery efforts, but at this point, it's not looking good at all, says Ziegler

    Link: http://www.engadget.com/2009/10/10/t-mobile-we-probably-lost-all-your-sidekick-data/

     UPDATE

    Matt Hickey at CNET just confimed the situation: "It looks as though the current Sidekick outage is turning into a bigger mess for T-Mobile. The company has just published an apology to Sidekick users who've been without many important services for a few days--and says that because of a server error at Danger (a Microsoft subsidiary), affected users might not get their data back at all."

    His conclusion: "This is terrible news for some Sidekick users out there and is also one of the largest fails in cloud computing in recent memory. " (bold mine)

    Link: http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-10372521-1.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

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    http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
    Fri, 09 Oct 2009 09:34:10 -0700 Bibliotecas necesarias, por Joaquín Rodríguez http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/bibliotecas-necesarias-por-joaquin-rodriguez http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/bibliotecas-necesarias-por-joaquin-rodriguez

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    Portada Blogs
    Sistema madri+d
    Los futuros del libro
    Libros, editores y lectores en el siglo XXI
    Buscador madri+d

    Joaquín Rodríguez, que mantém um blog de leitura imprescindível, Los futuros del libro, escreve hoje sobre as “Bibliotecas necesarias.”

    A questão que, para ele se coloca hoje, é  não tanto saber “si los dispositivos digitales acabarán matando a la estrella del papel”, mas se  as bibliotecas “como instituciones públicas que ponen al servicio de la ciudadanía un conocimiento vegetal, tendrán o no sentido en el siglo XXI.”

    A partir desta questão, elenca um conjunto de razões que justificam que as bibliotecas sejam hoje mais necessárias do que nunca:

    ·         “Las bibliotecas son, para empezar, una pieza fundamental del sostenimiento de las sociedades democráticas, y eso al menos por dos razones fundamentales: porque son el espacio (…) donde se atesora la diversidad de opiniones y puntos de vista sobre los más diversos aspectos de nuestra convivencia, donde podemos formarnos un juicio maduro y bien informado sobre los más diversos aspectos que atañen a nuestra coexistencia, donde cabe que construyamos ordenadamente una opinión crítica sobre los asuntos que competan a nuestra vida en sociedad.”

    ·         “En el capítulo de las razones fundamentales, además, la promoción de la lectura y de las actividades relacionadas con ellas sigue siendo una actividad insustituible, junto a la que deben ejercer la familia y la escuela.Lectura y democracia van de la mano.”

    Contudo, é certo que “el giro digital es un hecho incontrovertible y que la introducción y uso de dispositivos digitales de toda naturaleza será una cuestión de tiempo.”

    E “también, que en la era del acceso se difuminan las fronteras entre los catálogos antaño incomunicados de forma que a mayor conectividad, menor diferenciación, y que las bibliotecas deben redefinir su lugar en esa maraña de oferta informativa abriéndose a la cooperación y la colaboración.”

    nativos digitales y analfabetos digitales

    No entanto, apesar de tudo isso, “su labor será determinante en este nuevo universo ligado a la memoria digital: si es cierto que los nativos digitales son usuarios regulares y aún expertos de determinadas herramientas, son, según los recientes estudios sobre usos y costumbres de esta población, analfabetos digitales.” Assim, “La labor de alfabetización y dinamización digitales que las bibliotecas deberán ejercer es decisiva para que aprendan a:

    ·         distinguir la calidad de la información, su fiabilidad;

    ·         que aprendan a interrogar adecuadamente a la web, sin monosílabos;

    ·         que entiendan su arquitectura y sus sistemas de filtrado y clasificación, también de censura y ocultamiento;

    ·         que aprendan a sosegar sus impulsos de lobos navegantes de la red para apreciar la complejidad de los argumentos allí expuestos.

     

    memoria vegetal

    Mas precisamos de mais. Necessitamos que “las bibliotecas y sus bibliotecarios sean celosos conservadores de nuestra memoria vegetal, tal como acuñara el término Umberto Eco en la conferencia inaugural de la Biblioteca de Alejandría, y esto no por un mero afán de conservación arqueológico, sino porque nuestro cerebro lector se forjó en la lectura sucesiva y progresiva de argumentos ordenados en pos de una coherencia y sentido determinados. Se trata, por tanto, de salvaguardar la memoria vegetal de nuestra especie, un tipo de racionalidad específico, una identidad individual y colectiva características.”

    Conclusão

    Las bibliotecas son hoy más necesarias que nunca porque garantizan la diversidad que constituye las sociedades democráticas; anima a la lectura como factor fundamental del crecimiento de juicios ilustrados; alfabetiza a la sociedad digital y garantiza el acceso plural y libre al conocimiento; conserva nuestra memoria vegetal, el fundamento de nuestros cerebros lectores.

     

    LINK: http://weblogs.madrimasd.org/futurosdellibro/archive/2009/10/09/126229.aspx


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    http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
    Fri, 09 Oct 2009 03:37:39 -0700 Kindle's rivals have made Amazon rush http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/kindles-rivals-have-made-amazon-rush http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/kindles-rivals-have-made-amazon-rush

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    Amanda Andrews  writes today at Telegraph  (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/amazon/6274834/Kindles-rivals-have-made...  ) an interesting piece on Kindle International.

    She thinks “Amazon's announcement earlier this week that it will launch the Kindle ereader outside of the US on October 19 has been rushed” and the reason for the rush was the moves from its rivals:

    1.    Apple and its Tablet device – expected by early 2010  - is its biggest threat.

    2.    Then there is Sony. A rival wireless device is close and “Sony will surely use its electronics experience to bring moving images and sound to the device.”

    3.    Then there's the obvious competition from low-cost netbooks, pocketbooks and other readers.

    4.    “Price is another stumbling block. In the UK, Amazon's top titles will cost $13.99 (£8.68) compared with $9.99 in the US.”

    5.    Then there is the question of territorial right. For instance,”the Kindle will need to sign up all major book publishers to ensure its best chance of success overseas. While many are already on board, UK users will have access to about 250,000 titles, as opposed to 350,000 in the US, as some high-profile publishers such as Random House have not yet joined.”

    For Andrews, “the fact that a UK-centric device will not be available before next year implies Amazon has moved earlier than expected to pre-empt competition.” And the centric question it is not a question exclusive of UK: the same is obviously true for the other countries, since the plan is for AT&T through their network of partnerships to provide 3G network coverage to Kindle and Whispernet across 100 countries.

    NOW THE PIECE OF CAKE:  AT&T does not have a presence in the UK, so it unclear who Amazon's UK mobile network will be. UK operators, including Orange, O2 and Vodafone say they are not involved, but Amazon insists Whispernet will work in the UK. A lack of organisation from the quick roll-out or a cunning plan up Amazon's sleeve? The plans are puzzling.”

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    http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
    Thu, 08 Oct 2009 03:33:39 -0700 Analysing the Global Ranking of Publishers, By Rüdiger Wischenbart (MUST READ) http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/analysing-the-global-ranking-of-publishers-by http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/analysing-the-global-ranking-of-publishers-by

    For the past three years publishing consultant Rüdiger Wischenbart has released a “Global Ranking of the Publishing Industry,” which looks at companies with revenues over $US250 million.

    The analysis of the latest ranking,can be found at Publishing Perspectives. and focus on "how the changing dynamics between the professional/science, education and trade sectors have have affected this year’s ranking."


    Global Publishers Rankings

     

    Wischenbart says "It is a strange world we live, read and publish" and stresses some points:

    1. "among the top ten global publishing groups, just five have a significant presence in trade books: UK’s Pearson (with its Penguin group), Germany’s Bertelsmann, of course (with Random House and the ever ailing “Club” business), France’s Hachette Livres (which is also a strong player in education), Spain’s Planeta (the new kid on the block, having gobbled up France’s #2, Editis), and Italy’s De Agostini. Oh, and by the way, they are all headquartered in Europe."
    2. "many companies in the rankings are doing much better, both economically and in terms of re-inventing themselves. While the Pearson group performs remarkably well in comparison to most of its peers, the real powerhouse seems to currently be Thomson (now Thomson Reuters), last year’s #1, and currently #3. It slipped to this position due to last year’s internal reorganization following its merger with Reuters, the result of moving a major stake of its old information business into the new, news driven Reuters division and of selling off “Thomson Learning”, which is performing well under the newly established brand of “Cengage” (#13 on the list). Thomson’s traditional publishing arm, in this perspective, is still good enough to rank it #3 on the global scale."
    3. "the story also demonstrates a much more fundamental lesson about how “the book industry” has completely reoriented itself within just a few years when it comes to handing “professional information” (which includes STM, science, journals, and a lot of other pragmatically useful content). Today, this wealth of information is born digital, distributed digitally, and is not available in any bookstore near you."

    Obviously the document is a must read

    Link:  Analysing the Global Ranking of Publishers,  By Rüdiger Wischenbart (Publishing Perspectives) : http://publishingperspectives.com/?p=6675

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    http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
    Wed, 07 Oct 2009 09:31:42 -0700 More about the price of Kindle in Portugal (& other EU countries) http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/more-about-the-price-of-kindle-in-portugal-an http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/more-about-the-price-of-kindle-in-portugal-an

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    This morming I twitted that the price of the Kindle in Portugal would be $359.98 = $279.00 + Shipping & Handling - $20.98 + Import Fees Deposit - $60.00 (in € something like 244.74 = 189.68 + Shipping & Handling – 14.26 + Import Fees Deposit – 40.80 €). This means that we'll pay more 25- 30% than in the US.

    This is confirmed for UK by Martyn Daniels «In Rip Off UK You Could Pay 25% More For a Kindle?»  and by Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 Tax headache looms for UK Kindle buyers», and by Eoin Purcell for Ireland, «Kindle goes worldwide».

    Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 [if gte mso 9]>

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    http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
    Tue, 06 Oct 2009 16:29:15 -0700 Google Puts an .EXE File on their Homepage, by Amit Agarwal http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/google-puts-an-exe-file-on-their-homepage-by http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/google-puts-an-exe-file-on-their-homepage-by

    set google as homepage

    This a screenshot of the Google homepage inside Internet Explorer.

    As Amit Agarwal explains, "If you click the "Update Now" link on the Google home page, it will download an executable file – setgooglesearch.exe – on the desktop that will set Google as the default search engine inside IE."

     Agarwai thinks "its the first time that they have placed a direct link to an .exe file on the homepage", and since "its not mentioned anywhere that the link points to an executable, most people would only realize it once they have clicked the link."

    Concluson: "Do you agree with this approach?"

    LINK: http://www.labnol.org/internet/google-exe/10413/

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    http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado
    Fri, 25 Sep 2009 17:55:00 -0700 Dan Brown's E-Book Sales Aren't So Killer After All (2) or how the " toothpaste is back in the tube " http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/dan-browns-e-book-sales-arent-so-killer-after-0 http://joseafonsofurtado.posterous.com/dan-browns-e-book-sales-arent-so-killer-after-0

    My last post's title was "Dan Brown's E-Book Sales Aren't So Killer After All". Today, David Rothman quotes Steve Windwalker, from Kindle Nation Daily recognizing that  Amazon's Hardcover Editions of The Lost Symbol Recapture the Lead over Kindle Downloads.

    More specifically, he writes: "After 10 days in which real-time sales of Kindle downloads of The Lost Symbol outpaced Amazon's hardcover sales of the book for all but a few hours, the hardcover has o'ertaken its digital sister version as of mid-day today, September 25." This screenshot proves it:

     

     

     

    Of course Steve Windwalker's   original prediction was that "hardcover sales will catch up," but he said "during the holidays," and as he writes "didn't mean Columbus Day or even my forthcoming week on the Cape."

    So, lowering the premature hype, he concludes: " we'll just say that the toothpaste is back in the tube and leave it at that, for now, and keep an eye on where it all goes from here."

    More thoughtful...

    (link to Steve Windwalker's post http://thekindlenationblog.blogspot.com/2009/09/amazons-hardcover-editions-of-lost.html)

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    http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/183693/_IGP2114.jpg http://posterous.com/users/4aqp4MV5sL0l Jose Afonso Furtado joseafonsofurtado Jose Afonso Furtado