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Burning the Page: The eBook revolution and the future of reading

Burning the Page: The eBook revolution and the future of reading

Titel: Burning the Page: The eBook revolution and the future of reading Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Jason Merkoski
Vom Netzwerk:
from mainstream and indie publishers, from top-selling and unknown authors, from startups all around the globe, and even from established technology conglomerates like Google.
    Millions of texts across hundreds of libraries are being digitized, even tomes from the 1800s with pages often more brittle than pressed violets. Tech companies like Google and the Internet Archive are scanning all of this content so that the future will have these books.
    Big Five publishers are moving more or less quickly to accommodate this technological revolution. Some of them are posturing wildly with their arms waving, as if to say, “Yes, I’m part of this!” But in reality, they often just sit on committees and dabble from the sidelines. Mainstream publishers who still take their triple-martini lunches (yes, it still happens) and focus wholly on print books and established relationships between authors and agents and printers are neglecting the new players. The technologists, the software companies, and the entrepreneur-innovators move at a Silicon Valley pace, rather than the nine-to-five life of Manhattan publishers accustomed to taking all of August off as a vacation, as if Manhattan is somehow part of Italy.
    I spoke of the Big Five publishers, but perhaps the industry should start talking about the Big Six publishers, because Amazon is in publishing now. In addition to its self-publishing programs, it has a publishing imprint called Encore, which, in its own words, “uses information such as customer reviews on Amazon.com to identify exceptional, overlooked books and authors with more potential than their sales may indicate.” It uses crowd-sourced reviews to help make its publishing decisions, rather than relying on the traditional editorial process.
    But even if Amazon doesn’t serve as a traditional editorial curator with Encore, other companies more than fill the void. And they’re not all publishers and retailers.
    Ebook innovation is also happening at two other kinds of places. The first is behind closed and double-locked corporate doors, behind walls of security, at tech companies like Apple and Amazon. The second place is on the fringes, right in public view.
    To me, the second kind of place is more interesting. That’s where passionate inventors come together to show off their latest homegrown e-readers or applications. In my time at Amazon, I found myself more at home with these kinds of people. I’d often fly at the drop of a hat to join one of their conferences. I liked the feeling of frenetic innovation, the fervency of the converted who gather together and create. These were builders. These were my people.
    One of the places I’d find myself was at the Internet Archive. Run by dot-com millionaire and former Amazonian Brewster Kahle, the Internet Archive sees itself as a library for all kinds of media—instructional films from the 1950s, public domain ebooks, live concert recordings, even software and old video games from the 1980s. You can download them all for free from the Internet Archive.
    The Internet Archive is housed in a beautiful, whitewashed old church by the marina in San Francisco. When you walk inside, you feel something holy. You feel like this is the kind of place that deserves to safeguard our books and music, like that’s a holy mission. And maybe it is. There are still varnished wooden pews, even though the chapel has been converted to a massive conference room.
    Now that he’s made his millions, what Brewster does in life is based on idealism. There’s a subtle attitude you can see in someone who does that—a shift, a lightness of being, or something special in his bearing. Call it what you will, but something shows through in someone predisposed to ethical idealism.
    Brewster reminds me of an avuncular 1950s propeller-head, someone who would rather be tinkering and building a ham radio in his basement workshop, someone who enjoys the smell of a soldering iron. He was one of those dot-com millionaires who didn’t fit his image very well. But man, he loves books! He pays out of his own pocket for a small army of people to scan in old books to digitize them.
    He and the other idealists at the Internet Archive are like monks in the Middle Ages, only instead of recopying ancient manuscripts with pen and ink, they use massive server farms that hum underneath the wooden pews. The Internet Archive is like a Google held together by duct tape and idealism.
    Brewster organized great

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