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出版的未来

The Future of Publishing
课程网址: http://videolectures.net/mitworld_long_grant_jackson_miller_stein...  
主讲教师: Geoffrey Long, Robert Miller, Jennifer Jackson, Bob Stein, Gavin Grant
开课单位: 麻省理工学院
开课时间: 2011-06-17
课程语种: 英语
中文简介:
怀旧,焦虑和乐观情绪混合在这个小组中,致力于想象本书前面的内容,因为出版专业人士和其他人讨论了数字技术对商业的影响。加文格兰特的精品马萨诸塞州出版公司的小啤酒出版社“仍然在生产纸质物品的业务。“但新技术正在以多种方式改变他的工作:他通过知识共享授权一些书籍;以各种电子书格式下载其他人作为下载(产生这些可能是一个昂贵的“麻烦”);并以博客和Facebook支持的沟通形式部署社交媒体,以宣传和吸引热情的读者到公司的网站。格兰特看到亚马逊及其Kindle成为推动畅销书畅销的欺凌者,并对网络发布的“超本地化”可能性感兴趣:为他的独家出版物找到读者,并邀请他们仔细阅读他的非主流书籍清单.Agent Jennifer Jackson描述了网络带来的一些有趣的直接营销活动,包括作者在YouTube上制作的图书预告片,以及由客户和其他作者进行的在线媒体项目:一个由虚构电视节目剧集组成的网站。杰克逊还维护博客,她希望提供关于她的业务终结的“透明度”,这是一种弥合代理人和作者之间“巨大鸿沟”的方法。她的作者关注数字盗版,但杰克逊认为作者的工作广泛分布最终导致更多的销售。罗伯特·米勒特别对贸易出版模式感到沮丧,对作者的天文进步,以及40%的图书回报率导致HarperStudio (哈珀柯林斯分支)。他的“从头开始做事”的概念涉及到读者同时提供数字和实体书籍。他的第一个作品是马克吐温以前未发表的作品集,可以作为单独的书籍,也可以是带有声读物和可下载书籍的打折套装。他庆祝转向数字化的生产成本降低,但他对小型但迅速扩大的电子书市场持谨慎态度,他预计这会给价格带来“下行压力”,这将对他的业务产生负面影响.Bob Stein设想书籍本质的大规模演变,从对象到“读者和有时作者聚集的地方。”他的书籍未来研究所主持出版实验,例如作者基本上博客和温和回应特定主题。有朝一日,读者可能会与死去的作者合作,例如为成品书添加章节。他认为电子书是过渡性的:“与增加书籍销售有关的实验很有意思,并且会延长出版时间,但不会创造出人类如何共同努力增加知识的未来,而这正是出版业所做的。 “这些新的表现形式不会很快出现。他写道,在第一部小说出版之前,印刷术发明了300年,但不可避免的是,“我们正在改变人类彼此沟通的方式。”
课程简介: Nostalgia, anxiety and optimism mix in this panel devoted to imagining what lies ahead for the book, as publishing professionals and others discuss the impact of digital technology on the business. Small Beer Press, Gavin Grant’s boutique Massachusetts publishing company, “is still in the business of producing paper objects.” But new technologies are transforming his work in several ways: He licenses some books via Creative Commons; releases others as downloads in a variety of ebook formats (generating these can be an expensive “hassle”); and deploys social media, in the form of blogs and Facebook-enabled communication, to publicize and attract passionate readers to the firm’s website. Grant sees Amazon and its Kindle as a bully driving readers toward best sellers, and is interested in the “hyperlocal” possibilities of the web for publishing: finding readers for his one-of-a-kind publications, and inviting them to peruse his non-mainstream book lists. Agent Jennifer Jackson describes some intriguing direct marketing activities made possible by the web, including author-produced book trailers on YouTube, and an online media project undertaken by clients and other authors: a website consisting of episodes for a fictional TV show. Jackson also maintains blogs that she hopes provide “transparency” about her end of the business, a way to bridge “the great divide” between agents and authors. Her authors are concerned with digital piracy but Jackson feels wide distribution of an author’s work ends up generating more sales over time. Robert Miller’s frustration with the trade publishing model-- in particular, astronomical advances to authors, and book return rates of 40% -- led to HarperStudio (a Harper Collins offshoot). His notion of “starting something from scratch” involves making digital and physical books available simultaneously to the reader. His first offering is a collection of previously unpublished pieces by Mark Twain that are available as individual books, or in discounted bundles with audio books and downloadable books. He celebrates the reduction in production costs in moving to digital, but he’s wary of the small but rapidly expanding ebook market, which he anticipates will impose a “downward pressure on prices,” a loss of revenue that will negatively impact his business. Bob Stein envisions a wholesale evolution of the essence of books, from objects to “a place where readers and sometimes authors congregate.” His Institute on the Future of the Book hosts experiments in publishing, such as one where an author essentially blogs and moderates responses around a particular subject. Readers could someday collaborate with dead authors, adding chapters to finished books, for instance. He sees ebooks as transitional: “The experiments which have to do with increasing sales of book are interesting, and will prolong publishing but won’t invent the future of how humans work together to increase our knowledge, which is what publishing used to do.” These new expressive forms won’t emerge quickly. It took 300 years after the invention of the printing before the first novel was written, he notes, but inexorably, “we’re shifting the ways humans communicate with each other.”
关 键 词: 情绪; 出版专业; 亚马逊
课程来源: 视频讲座网
最后编审: 2019-06-04:cwx
阅读次数: 48