Archive for June, 2008

The Joys of the Firefox Browser

firefox For all you web surfers out there, if you haven’t discovered the Firefox browser, now is the time to expand your horizons. In particular, if you are a blogger or keen on exploring and using social media, Firefox is excellent for integrating blogging and social media tools for a holistic viewing and interactive experience of the web.

Most people start their web explorations using Internet Explorer because that is the web browser that comes bundled with their PCs. Internet Explorer is pretty good as far as it goes. Firefox is a free, open source browser that you can download from the web - it is used and trusted by millions of people and because it is open source, there are a lot of extensions and add-ons that you can add to it to enhance your surfing experience. Open source means that they have opened up their software to the world so that anyone can develop applications to be used with Firefox - this contrasts with Microsoft’s proprietory model where the code is secret so you can only use products that have been developed under licence to Microsoft.

Firefox 3.0 has just been launched and you can download it free. Firefox has a number of nifty features such as zooming and a password manager but my favourite is the ability to type any keyword into the URL address bar without knowing the exact web address of what you’re looking for and it cleverly takes you straight to the website you want or offers up a list of options as a Google search would do. So just typing in “bbc” takes you straight to the BBC’s homepage without your having to manually type “www.bbc.co.uk”.

But where Firefox shines for me is in its intuitive functions that help with blogging and other social media interactions. To name a few:

Managing Images for Blogging

I use images regularly to illustrate my blogs and if I get them from the web, in Firefox all I have to do is right-click on the photo on the webpage where I’ve found it, select “Copy Image Location” and paste that URL into the “Add Image URL” of my blogging application and voila, the picture appears on my blog post. I also usually add a link back to the image and I can just right click on that webpage and “Copy Link Location” to paste in my blog post.

In contrast, to find the image location in Internet Explorer is unintuitive and fiddly - when you right click on the photo, you have to go to “Properties” to find the URL of the image location.

Blogging right from your browser

There is a brilliant add-on called Scribefire for Firefox that allows you to blog right from the Firefox browser - it opens up as the bottom half of the browser screen and you can drag-and-drop images and text from the webpage you are blogging about into the Scribefire. It syncs with your blog so that you can even choose the categories you’ve set up in your blog (or create new ones) and when you’re done, you can either save it as a draft or send it to your blog for immediate publication.

Twitter and Firefox

If you are a Twitter fan, there are a lot of applications that integrate Twitter with Firefox so that you can follow your Twitter buddies and also post “tweets” to Twitter without leaving Firefox. One such is Twitbin which opens Twitter as a sidebar in Firefox. I was using Tweetbar but it’s not yet compatible with Firefox 3 - hopefully, that will be addressed soon as I prefer that interface to Twitbin’s.

Annotating webpages

You can also annotate webpages with virtual Post-It notes and send the annotated page to friends, using Fleck. There is an integrated application with Firefox that makes it easy to do.

Firefox Add-Ons

I could go on but it’s probably just easier if you go to the Firefox Add-Ons page and check them out for yourself!

If you already use Firefox and have some favourite applications/ tools, do add a comment and tell us which one(s) you like the best.

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Thursday, June 26th, 2008 at 1:00am

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Digitise or Die Conference

I’ve been invited to join a panel at “Digitise or Die: The conference for the book industry in the digital age” on 3rd July, held at the London Stock Exchange. The conference is organised by The Bookseller, the trade journal for the book industry in the UK. The blurb says:

The Bookseller is going to get to grips with the digital questions for the book industry once and for all.

Is the digitisation furore just a nervous reaction to experiences within the music industry - or is the heightening concern very real? Is eveyone prepared for the digitisation of the written word? What are the new technologies that publishers should be thinking about that could improve their online presence?

How can digitisation sell more books? What about digital rights and digital copyright? How do you find and develop communities of readers online? What are the differences in digital strategy of trade and non-trade publishing?

With e-books about to take off in the UK, isn’t it time the industry faced up to the changing consumer climate and technology?

These are just some of the questions that will be addressed at The Bookseller’s Digitise or Die full-day conference on 3rd July in London. It is fair to say, that you will definitely miss out if you are not there.

I’ll be on the panel discussing Digital Spaces, alongside Andrew Keen (author of The Cult of the Amateur, I think, though it’s not clear from the draft programme yet) and Kieron Smith, managing director of BookRabbit, which is a cross between the book social network LibraryThing and online bookstore Amazon. The panel will be chaired by Jeremy Davis of Chameleon Net.

The panel topic will be:

Different kinds of digital spaces: @ home on PC, out on the mobile, paid for content, UGC what works on different platforms? To what extent do digital platforms fit into each other to enable content to live across hardware boundaries? How do young people in different cultures interact with digital platforms? (itunes, phones, PC, online etc…) and how does this culture affect the use of such devices?

This invitation came via a non-blog related route shortly after my series on audio downloads and ebooks so it feels to me as if there is some synchronicity going on right now. Given my background as a novelist and my current explorations of the social media sphere, what I’d like to contribute to the discussion, I think, is the use of digital spaces by writers and storytellers from a creative perspective. How can we use the new media to enhance the way we tell stories? How might the stories we tell evolve with new media channels? Is creating a story for online reading different from creating one for a physical book? Is it different for e-book reading? Is reading passe in the face of YouTube and Flickr?

I’ll be making notes and researching all this in preparation for the conference over the next few weeks.

If you have any thoughts, ideas or experiences of storytelling in digital spaces, please do get in touch so I can share your views at the conference as well. I’d also love to hear from you if you have views about ebooks and the current state of ebook publishing - and any thoughts about what you would like to see evolve in ebooks and digital publishing in the future.

You can get in touch by leaving a comment to this post, or emailing me via the Contact link above, or by leaving me a voicemail at http://www.jaxtr.com/yangmayooi. If I use your contribution at the conference I will of course give acknowledgement to you for the contribution so do leave a name as well.

If you’d like to come along to the conference, you can do so using the Bookseller’s booking form.

ebk

digsp

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, June 18th, 2008 at 1:00am

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Social Network for Book Lovers

When I visit someone’s home, I can’t help but checkout the books on their shelves. Often, I find that with very good friends, we have many books and interests in common. But what is the most interesting is when I visit the home of someone that I get on pretty well with and like a lot but there’s just something that I can’t put my finger on - for some reason, we do not connect at a very deep level and I just have a sense that we’ll never be the best of friends. When I visit their home, it all becomes clear - they do not have a single book in their home, apart from maybe a few cookery books or travel guides. In my house, every single room, including the hallway is full of books - and I’ve just given a whole pile to Oxfam to make space for new books.

It’s not that I talk about books and writing very much with my friends, even with those who do have a lot of books nor is it that I am only interested in making friends with people who like books. I think it’s just the fact that I read a lot and with the friends who also enjoy reading, we have a connection that is about exploring ideas, analysis and arguments that books can give you. Books also offer a perspective on time, space and people in that they tell you about history, landscape, context, psychology, sociology, anthropology, economics and just plain old human stories. People who don’t read miss out on that opportunity to travel beyond the immediate extent of their own experience and so I guess when we come together, we can laugh and enjoy each other’s company and give emotional support as friends would do - but we just do not have an overlapping breadth of interest.

Since I’ve been exploring ebooks and audio books in my Going Shelfless experiment, I have wondered what the future holds for us readers when we can no longer explore the full extent of each other’s libraries because everything is a digital file on a laptop or iPod or ebook reader. Will an aspect of friendship and social connection be lost?

Many book lovers have probably discovered this social network already but I’ve only just come across it. LibraryThing enables you to put a list of your books online - books you own, books you are currently reading, books you’d like to read etc - to show to the world and also to see who else has the same reading taste as you.

You sign up for a free account (which allows you to list up to 200 books - after that, you need to pay for an annual or a lifetime account at pretty cheap rates) and you can then list your books by finding them on various online bookstores which have been intergrated with LibraryThing - clicking on the book link automatically inserts them in your library. There’s a Talk forum where you can discuss a particular book. There are also different book Groups you can join sorted by genre eg there’s a Science Fiction group and a Crime, Thriller and Mystery group.

In true social media fashion, you can also put a widget on your blog that shows random books from your library. You can see mine below:

You can see my full library (or at least the books I’ve gotten round to listing) at: http://www.librarything.com/catalog/yangmayooi

You can also add other LibaryThing members as Friends, as you might add Friends on Facebook or MySpace. One way to make friends is that you can see how many other people have a book that you have in their library - you can discover who they are if they have a public profile by drilling down through the numbers to specific profiles, and you can invite them to be your friend that way. Or you can search for your friends using the Search function.

I don’t have the time to catalogue ALL the books I own but I may use it to log current books as they have a short cut button you can put on your browser bar to add books to your library as you purchase them from Amazon and I usually buy my books from there anyway.

I wonder if members of LibraryThing list all the books they own and have ever read or is there the temptation to omit the more soically unacceptable ones - the low brow bodice-ripper, say, or the more desperate sounding self-help books that you might hide behind another layer of more worthy titles or even keep under your bed….

If you’re a member of LibraryThing, add me as a Friend. Also, please share your experience of this network and how it may have added to your enjoyment of books and reading. And whether you “censor” your list for public consumption…!

ebk

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, June 11th, 2008 at 1:00am

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Ebooks: opportunities for writers and publishers

ebook-reader One of the joys - and also problems - of books is that they are physical objects, which means they take up space. Taking up space has a cost in today’s crowded world. To get a book from its publisher to you, the reader, requires it to be printed, stored and distributed to the book shops - with all the associated printing presses, paper, bindings, warehousing and transport and fuel costs that are involved. Where a book is globally distributed, you also need to factor in the air fuel and freighting costs and The carbon footprint implications of that. On top of it all, the bookshops where we, the readers, go to finally get our hands on the book have to cover the cost of their premises - and you can imagine how much that could be in the centre of a major city like London: which inevitably means that they can never stock all the books ever published. In addition, there’s the army of people to pay for - from the literary agents to the editors and sales and marketing team to the printers and truck drivers and warehouse workers and bookshop staff. All this huge economic machinery is supported by the humble book, scribbled by a little lone writer in his/ her garrett. Let’s say that each book is sold at an average of €10 per unit. That is an awful lot of books each author must sell to give the publisher and distributor and book shop a return on all those costs.

Which is why in today’s market, it is usually the populist mega-sellers that will be taken on by the agents, publishers and book retailers. The result is that it is increasingly difficult for an unknown writer to be published and authors who are doing only moderately well (the Mid Listers) are finding themselves being dropped. The keepers of the machinery cannot risk poor sales - it’s a business after all.

My recent exploration into ebooks has got me thinking: can they offer new opportunities for writers and publishers so that there is less reliance on this clunky, inefficient process?

OK, the technology of the dedicated ebook reader isn’t quite there yet with a number of functions that still need to be fine-tuned. They are also really too expensive for mass appeal to consumers at the moment. There are also too many conflicting formats - like the early day of videotape where there were the incompatible formats of VHS and Betamax. And, yes, as Margaret Atwood pointed out at the Frankfurt Book Fair recently, you can’t read an e-book in the bath.*

But let’s say, in a few years time, they manage to improve the technology and we have ultra-portable e-readers with great screens that are easy on the eye, pages turn easily and quickly and the price falls to something sensible. Let’s say they come to an agreed format so we can read any ebook on any e-reader or device. And there’s a waterproofing accessory (as there is for iPods) so you can take your e-reader into the bath or swimming pool. At the point, it will be more likely that the average non-techie consumer will buy an e- reader in the way that many people now have an iPod or mp3 player and this will make the market for ebooks truly sustainable.

In this context, I think these might be some of the opportunities for writers and publishers:

# Many writers are already today trying out self-publishing, especially if they are having difficulty getting their work accepted through the conventional publishing process. As I’ve reported on my other blog, Fusion View, self-publishing can mean that you end up with boxes of your books piled up in your house, which you are then responsible for distributing to bookshops or selling directly to your readers. Self-publishing your work as an ebook cuts out those storage and distribution problems - your ebook can be easily downloaded direct by your readers either from your website or an online store like Amazon. In fact, Amazon.com in the US already offers a service to authors for creating an ebook that can be sold direct from the Amazon site to readers using the Amazon Kindle ereader device. Another company Yudu offers a service to authors to create multimedia ebooks. I haven’t tried either service - if you have, or if you’ve published your book as an ebook, please do add a comment and tell me about your experience.

# The problem for any self-published author is getting noticed - whether your work is published as a physical object or an ebook. Marketing your ebook is going to be the biggest time commitment you are likely to have to factor in. However, strategic use of social media and other online platforms as well as the traditional methods of flogging a book will all help. The advantage of the ebook format is that you can give away the first chapter easily by email or pdf as a free sample to entice your readers.

# Physical books typically have a shelf life of around 6 months, after which the bookshops send them back to the publisher for pulping or to be sold at the discount stores. This is to make way for new titles and is entirely due to the limitations of space in the retail units. Ebooks take up very little digital space and can be made available forever online. Publishers can take advantage of what author Chris Anderson called The Long Tail but maintaining books in e-format so that they can reap the profit from occasional sales into the distant future - with many backlist titles continually building up, the long tail principle indicates that the sum total of the occasional sale of individual titles will add up to quite a lot. This will help the Mid Listers who may find their books all out of stock in the conventional publishing cycle and who may also be able remain profitable for the publishers since the cost of maintaining their physical books is taken out of the cost-benefit equation.

# Physical books will never disappear, in the way the CDs are still around in spite of music downloads - and in fact, vinyl records are even making a comeback. If publishers move towards issuing any book in both physical and e-format, it will be immediately available for the two different kinds of consumer and in the long term, the ebook will remain purchasable even when the stock of the physical one runs out.

# At the moment, ebooks are electronic versions of books written for paper. As the electronic medium itself becomes more sustainable, can its strengths be exploited by writers to create texts that are multi-layered, multi-linked and multi-media? Blogs incorporate links to other blogs or websites, pictures, audio or video within the text of the particular blog post. Can ebooks evolve the nature of writing so that it encompasses a wider experience beyond the immediate text through including links and other multi-media? For factual books, this is could potentially add to their usefulness in e-format by enabling the reader to click on a link to go direct to the cited reference, for example. For fiction, it might lead to, say, the floor plan of a building being made available in a thriller if the protagonist is looking at a floor plan in contemplation of carrying out a heist in the building. Or could jazz music be incorporated to evoke the mood in a noir detective story set in the 1940s?

# In the way that DVDS include bonus features around a movie, could ebooks include similar special items such as an interview with the author, research notes along the lines of “The Making of….” and other location, historical or background information, especially where the novel is set against the backdrop of real events or an interesting locale?

# Purists might argue that this is not what reading books is all about - but all you need to do is look at the popularity of the Harry Potter franchise, or even the Jane Austen one where there’s the book but around it, there are the movies, the spin-off books, the museums, the memorabilia, the TV series, the location tours etc. It is clear that fans of book based stories want to carry on living the experience in other ways and to offer multi-media and other “added value” features can make that ebook an attractive option to its physical counterpart.

# Do writers in the future need to see themselves not as merely text-bound narrators but as multi-media storytellers? Personally, I think this is a potentially exciting time for a writer who is able to embrace the multi-format style of telling their story. An interesting and highly profitable experiment in multi-format, multi-media narrative has already played out through the franchise of The Matrix - the full arc of the story encompasses the three movies as well the video game versions and film shorts. You can enjoy each separate medium without knowing anything about the storylines going on the other media but if you watch the movies, play the games and take in the short films, you get a deeper, richer experience of the world of The Matrix and its characters. I’m not saying that the humble ebook necessarily can take on a highly complex and sophisticated Hollywood narrative such as The Matrix project - I think that knowing that such a form of storytelling has been a huge success for the creators of The Matrix can inspire writers to play with how to convey their message via new and different media.

The one thing I haven’t mentioned is copyright, DRM (Digital Rights Management) or a viable business model for ebooks, especially multi-media ones. These issues are going to be key to the success of not only the attractiveness of the eformat to content creators but also to consumers embracing the medium. I haven’t analysed these aspects in sufficient detail to say more than that, at this stage, and there are greater experts than me grappling with this complex problem out there who have yet to solve it! All I would say is that ebooks offer exciting creative and commercial possibilities for writers and publishers and many of the problematic issues are likely to be resolved over time and through trial and error - as with the adaptiation of any new technology.

Photo: from iliadreader.co.uk product page

ebk

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Friday, June 6th, 2008 at 8:54am

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Portrait of Yang-May Ooi

ZenGuide is the blog and social media guide by Yang-May Ooi, writer and social media consultant. She is also the creator of the multimedia online "magazine" Fusion View. The ZenGuide site explores how communicating effectively through social media can contribute to your personal and professional success. We also highlight trends and news about blogging about social media in plain English!

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