missed promotions and soft focus
On the gratiousness of e-folk, speculation of the near future, and amazing sillyness.
A few days ago Cory Doctorow decided to give away his second novel, Eastern Standard Tribe on the internet. It is available in all kinds of formats and is the kind of science-fiction that is pretty much guaranteed to rock your world. He combines the wacky evilness of today with the slight advances of tomorrow to create a world that’s both smirkworthy, and apprehensively depressing. It’s also very short. so you do have time to read it.
As well, Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom is Cory’s first novel that he gave away on the internet; also quirkily rad.
What he’s doing with this represents something totally new on the electronic frontier. I mean, people have been giving their creative content away on the internet since it began, but only now is the trend becomming that even non-internet content (both of Doctorow’s books were and are published in dead-tree format as well) is being given away on the net even as it’s just being released into stores. It’s kind of like a pre-emptive strike against content pirates ; “so you’re going to copy my book and give it away on kazaa? i’ll beat that! i’ll host it on my site, fucker.” ).
And it works.
Authors who double realease their books like this (under a Creative Commons licence, which is a copyright that allows the creator to choose the conditions necessary for copying, manipulating and performing the work) see uniformly greater success than other internet authors. When one author’s book, was released for free on the internet the used copies of it on amazon went up in price by 40%!
Of course, this could easily be attributed to the fact that that particular author only distributed his book in pdf format, which is wholly unworkable except on a desktop, where few people want to sit and read a 300 page book about linux. But even the sales of Doctorow’s books, which are available in (and portable to) all formats, can be attributed to this, as many people, hooked by their internet meanderings with the texts, probably wanted a copy in the one format that they are really used to. This leads back to the core of the question (at least for me), which is not whether the internet is an effective promotional tool (whether the promotion involves the seemingly foolheaded act of giving away thousands and thousands of copies or not) , but if it is an effective distribution tool. Is there money to be made off of those electronic copies? And will be makeable without the help of the bloated traditional publishers?
Of course, that’s just the kind of thing that Cory deals with in Eastern Standard Tribe, so you really should go read it.
[EDIT: Cory Doctorow presented a paper on the subject of ebooks at a tech conference this week, you can read the public domain version here: E-books, Neither E Nor Books.]
underground
moments when i am so glad i am using a mac.
today i received e-mail viruses not just for myself, but also for Mary, Adam and Robert (all @simianuprising.com). These people and adresses do not exist.
Whoever’s idea it was to make the virus randomly generate likely adresses for every domain name is just plain mean.
also, if you are interested in my rambling thoughts concerning the commnications theory of digital media you may or may not want to check out my class blog for intro to digital media. WARNING: IT IS DRY AND DISTINCTLY LACKING IN EXCITEMENT.
you wish you were this sexy.
THEY’RE BACK!
(and without ever even being gone!)
go to the fabulous SIMIAN UPRISING STORE to get yours today!
also, i am aware that i have no right whatsoever to try to pimp any readers i have left at this point. but there is lots of shirts, and the world needs shirts.
mythical cheeses
food
on a preliminary definition of terms.
Blog (blawgg)
n. blogg-er, blogg-ed, blogg-ing, blog-osphere
contraction of “web” and “log”; weBLOG.
1. (basic) A “log” (journal,diary,written record) residing on the internet.
2. (common) A diary published directly to the internet despite personal nature. Personal thoughts shared with an impersonal network.
3. (technical) Any website created using “push-button” publishing, allowing quick addition of new web-material on a constant basis. “Posts” are generally displayed vertically, with the most recent at the top.
4. (theoretical) An online trend that is democratic in nature due to lack of hypertext (html;code;) knowledge necessary to create dynamic and fresh material; a way for the cyber-everyman to be represented online; a medium for discussion of ideas and opinions, and the dissemination of artistic creation on a regular basis; hope for an internet where the threat of invasion by external media empires is quickly becoming a reality.