The future of books looks bright when you see a video like this

If you believe the hype, printed books are going to follow newspapers into the dustbin of history. But I think that books, like newspapers, won’t die off completely. They’ll just become niche products, consumed by a small, but avid, group of people who still love the medium and find their digital equivalents lacking.

Nothing illustrates the magic of a physical book like this fun stop-motion video from Toronto independent bookseller Type Books.

Ironically, the fact that books are becoming a niche product will revive the fortunes of the small, independent booksellers who have been hammered over the last 10-15 years by competition from major chains. If they are smart, the independents will remain nimble and provide services that the Amazons of the world can’t: namely, curation. Type, for example, leans towards architecture & design, although they do carry a decent selection of general fiction/non-fiction. The reason they remain a going concern is because the owners have successfully identified the kinds of books read by people who love physical books, and they aggressively stock those.

Note that these two qualities aren’t inexorably linked. I’m waiting for the day when an independent bookstore offers e-books alongside their physical products, thereby enabling them to both serve a niche via actual books, and a general audience via digital download. However, such a day will not come so long as e-readers like the Kindle are closely tied to a major chain, with all of the DRM shackles that such an association implies. How long before we see a truly open-source e-reader? And what aspects of the bookselling market will need to change before that happens?

AP’s NewsRight and why it’s destined to fail

Yesterday, Poynter reported that the Associated Press and 28 other news organizations have launched NewsRight, “an ambitious venture to license original news content and collect royalties from aggregators.” Ambitious is right. The fact is, articles no longer have significant monetary value; otherwise, a system like NewsRight wouldn’t need to exist. AP and other legacy media organizations are trying to reverse a trend that’s irreversible.

Continue reading

Verizon Wireless is killing me

I’m stuck in Verizon bureaucratic hell.

When I moved to the United States in August, the iPhone 4 was nearing the end of its product lifecycle.  I wasn’t about to spend $400 for a device that was going to be replaced by what we thought was the iPhone 5 (but turned out to be the 4S). Instead, I decided to get the cheapest device I could get until the new iPhone was released: a Verizon Wireless prepaid phone. I obtained a hand-me-down device, and activated it with a new number.

When the iPhone 4S was finally released in October, I went to the store and plunked down my money for a pre-order (a stupid term if I ever heard one, by the way; “pre-order” is the state I was in before I ordered the phone). Naturally, due to my special circumstances as a) a customer switching from a prepaid to a contract plan, and b) my Canadian citizenship, I caused our local Verizon store representative no end of trouble. Moreover, he couldn’t migrate my prepaid number to the new iPhone because it hadn’t arrived yet – it was out of stock for weeks. So he assigned me a dummy phone number and told me I could migrate the number once the device arrived. Continue reading

Disclosure: The New Objectivity in Journalism

Yesterday evening, a few of my CUNY journalism school classmates and I attended a lecture by Brooke Gladstone, host of WNYC‘s excellent media-analysis program, On The Media. Her new book, The Influencing Machine is an analysis of journalism in the modern age, told in graphic novel format. Unsurprisingly, she spent most of her talk discussing bias in the media, and how to counterbalance that with disclosure. Continue reading

My other website

So, I’ve been in journalism school for about a month, which means I’ve got a couple of articles to share. Nothing’s been published yet, but I’m working on that.

For the moment, I’ll be showcasing my work at my CUNY blog, but I am still working out a model for managing my content, here, there, and also at urbandecoder.net, where I hope to eventually — as the title might suggest — write articles that decode the urban environment from big to small.

Onward and upward!

On earnestness and passion in New York City

Despite having been in New York for only two weeks, I already have one major observation: New Yorkers are genuinely very earnest and passionate about their chosen fields.

I’ve said this to a few people and it’s been interpreted as merely a comment on the level of entrepreneurship and creativity here. However, the level of passion goes deeper than that: New Yorkers seem to be unabashedly earnest about emerging ideas, to the point of what others might call naïveté about their chances for success.

New Yorkers are not actually that naïve — far from it. It’s just that they don’t seem to let criticism get in the way of their craft, and there does seem to be very little direct criticism of new ideas. The attitude seems to be more like how improvisational comedians do their work: rather than a “no”, every response to a pitch is a “yes, and…” type of answer that tends to encourage more refined ideas. Continue reading

Tuning CBC.ca with Cache Optimization

My colleague Blake Crosby has just posted a presentation about the performance and scalability tuning we do for CBC.ca.

We’d originally prepared this for the 2010 Akamai Global Customer Conference, but it wasn’t accepted there. We are now making the information publicly available in the hopes that it will help other high-volume news sites optimize their content delivery.