Log on:
Powered by Elgg

Paul Coyne :: Blog :: publishing 2.0

September 13, 2008

An interesting and relevent piece found on ReadWriteWeb.com. Wonder how this trend will inform our own web strategies? It's kinda along the lines i talked about at a recent web 2.0 talk and publishing and the overwhelming amount of choice out there now compared to 10 years ago, so it's timely too. Will watch with interest...

 

yahoologo6.jpgYou are not the center of the universe, especially on the internet. That's the lesson that even the biggest web brands are learning fast, and we expect to see widespread cultural changes occur right along side their learning.

One week after we wrote about the leaked screenshots that have since been confirmed as the forthcoming home page design of AOL.com, where 3rd party content and functionality is now welcome to come on in through the front door, now Yahoo! is telling the press that its home page will soon be home to far more content from outside the Yahoo! network than ever before. The era of the walled garden is over.

What's Coming to Yahoo.com

yahoohacklogo.jpgYahoo told the AP this morning that it will soon roll out the first major redesign of its home page in two years. That redesign will host a wide variety of widgets from rival services like movie links from Netflix, music from iTunes and Amazon. It will be something like the Facebook platform, but with more prominent placement for 3rd party services than even Facebook offers. Yahoo has talked about this plan before, but now is making a media push in preparation for action.

Left: The awesome logo for this week's Yahoo Hack Day

Just Like AOL.com, and Everyone Else On Top of Their Game

Yahoo's plans are similar to what AOL appears to be planning, where activity updates 3rd party social networks and possibly an on-site RSS reader will bring new functionality to AOL users.

As we wrote last week about AOL's strategy:

Aggregation of content from around the web is quite likely a key part of the future for almost all successful websites; the web is too large to pretend you're an island any more, even if your network is sprawling it just can't compete with the options offered by the web at large. While mainstream users used to think that AOL was the internet for years, they are not so naive any more.

This is an Important Trend

hughfucked.jpgWe've written here about the new class of powerhouse sites that specialize in bricolage, the art of assembling found objects. (Think BoingBoing and Neatorama). We've also written about why online noise is good for you. We don't expect the big portals to go as far with this strategy at first as the edge publishers have, but just like Google's indexing the open web blew the Yahoo! directory out of the water in search - so too is a new paradigm in aggregate publishing out-competing brand-selected, human edited portals.

Right: Hugh MacLeod puts it frankly.

It's an exciting time. We look forward to seeing how the rest of the world changes as the leading sources of information online turn towards a model of intelligent collecting and sharing, as opposed to a closed, self-facing broadcast model.

Discuss

Posted by Paul Coyne | 0 comment(s)
Bookmark and Share

August 27, 2008

 I Heard a rumour about this development some time ago, looks like it was true.

http://www.iwr.co.uk/information-world-review/news/2224721/version-amazon-kindle-target

 If this pans out then Amazon becomes a substantial part of a College’s Book library – no further storage or maintenance costs for the Institution with content purchasing done by the students downloaded to the device. I suspect many colleges would also enter into affiliate deals with Amazon and claim a couple of cents on each sale – reduced costs and a revenue stream to boot, who’s going to oppose that?

Filed under: eBooks, publishing 2.0, strategy

Posted by Paul Coyne | 0 comment(s)
Bookmark and Share

July 11, 2008

Lilia Efimova writes:

"It is not easy to find to whom and how to credit when one's ideas are inspired by reading weblogs of others and conversations in a weblog network. When those ideas leave the blogosphere and take shape of something that is part of paid work (publications, presentations, instruments, methods), lack of attribution could result in a bitter feelings as sharing one's ideas for a "collective good" is not the same as giving them to someone who might be competing for a publication space or consulting assignments in the "real world"."

As a publisher, and as someone personally interested in the exchange of ideas and knowledge, these sentiments are I think something to be keenly aware of. I try to attribute when and I where I can but sometimes kinda fail.

I'm wondering out loud here but is there any role for an independent publisher in the efforts to resolves these issues?

-HJ Lilia Efimova, Mathemagenic, July 10, 2008

Posted by Paul Coyne | 0 comment(s)
Bookmark and Share

June 26, 2008

Starting to turn my thoughts toward Emerald eBooks now. I wonder if we're ready to start contemplating such a thing? I mean, we looked at this some time ago and decided against such a route, but with the Elsevier acquisition all bets are off. And it's not just us, the whole industry is struggling to come to terms with books in the age of the internet - copyright, attention span issues regarding long form, interactivity and so on. Scot Karp writes:
You look at a book, read a book, and you easily perceive a coherent whole. You look at all the information on that book’s topic on the web, all connected, and you can’t see the sum of the parts — but we are starting to get our minds around it. We can’t yet recognize the superiority of this networked thinking process because we’re measuring it against our old linear thought process.
Is it true that before I begin to flesh out what an Emerald eBook might mean I need to first reconsider what a book is in a networked world? This idea of connectivity keeps cropping up - I remember Erin Maclean's delightful keynote at O'reilly Tools of change last year and her passion for the book, specifically her dictionary was evident. However she was happy to concede that the 'bookiness' of the book lay as much in it's relevance, usefulness, accessibility and convenience as it did in the actual content. Can't the these characteristics be enhanced by an e-edition of the book? Does it have be shovelled onto the 'net as PDF and left for users to download and read on some other device elsewhere? The defining characteristic of the web is the ability to link to other relevant content easily and quickly; Skott karp again:
Maybe I don’t need 250 page books anymore because the web enables me to connect ideas and create narratives that I used to depend on book authors to do for me, because I wasn’t able to access all the information and connect all the dots myself.
In the past when eBook and eTextbooks were floated around as a development I think we got hung up on ideas of adding value by adding content - specifically rich, interactive content. Why was this? Well, it was probably to do with believing that what people wanted was richer more interactive experience with the content. However it is now clear to me that people want links and to be able to connect the dots themselves. Question: Would you prefer to access an 'eBook' with rich connections rather rich interactive content? Comments please.

Posted by Paul Coyne | 0 comment(s)
Bookmark and Share

October 19, 2007

Extracted from the Pubishing 2.0 blog.

This extract is so timely. The facebook app development news really got my attention and I even started trying to figure out how to do build facebooks apps that pushed data to where people actually are - `be where the puck is` kind of approach (see my last post!). Now I read this from Publishing 2.0 and, wow! I feel like a dodged a bullet there. This really is a common sense notion and I appplaud it. I wonder how many others will pickup on this before millions of dollars are spent on facebook apps?

Time to deconstruct the “platform” hype. On the face of it, developers’ obsession with Facebook Platform makes no sense — build an application on Facebook and you can reach 30 million users. Build it on the web, and you can reach 10 (even 20) times as many users. On Facebook, there are automated mechanisms for apps to spread “virally,” but on the web, there are 1,000 times as many viral mechanisms, which truly killer apps like Google, YouTube, and Facebook itself are able to leverage as they scale users.

So why are developers obsessed with Facebook? Because there are fewer applications on Facebook than there are on the web, so there is less competition — at least for now. That’s it.

Read the rest of “Forget Platforms And Applications, Data Is The Real Asset On the Web” at the Publish2 Blog.

Posted by Paul Coyne | 0 comment(s)
Bookmark and Share

June 28, 2007

via Knowledgespeak

The World Association of Newspapers and a global coalition of publishing and media groups recently held a conference to unveil the progress of the Automated Content Access Protocol (ACAP). ACAP is a new standard to allow on-line content providers to automatically communicate information to search engine operators and others on how their content can be used.

Launched in October 2006, ACAP is slated for completion by the end of 2007. The initiative is designed to encourage owners of high quality content to make their work easily available online and also help avoid complex and expensive legal disputes between content providers and search engines.

The conference to mark the pilot project’s halfway point showed that ACAP is building on existing technology including Robots Exclusion Protocol and is using established methods for defining standard permissions semantics. Collaboration and support for the project has been overwhelming. The list of 28 organisations continues to grow and represents a worldwide interest in the project. Work is now in progress to prepare ACAP for the post-pilot stage -- to hand over a long-term sustainable model to a pre-existing governance organisation or to set up its own ACAP governance organisation.

In addition, ACAP is developing a language that will allow publishers to state permissions information in a standardised format that can be read by the web "crawlers" that are used by search engine operators and other content aggregators to search and index on-line content. No such system currently exists to enable the search engine operator to systematically comply with such policies on how this content can be used.

ACAP’s final conference is scheduled for November 29, 2007 in London.

Click here to read the original press release.


 

Blogged with Flock

Filed under: ACAP, Publishing 2.0, Rights

Posted by Paul Coyne | 0 comment(s)
Bookmark and Share

June 18, 2007

The first of irregular postings from the Tools of Change conference here in San Jose.

This posting is coming from a pre-conference tutorial on the subject of RSS for publishers.

We're partway through and the guy from Newsgator is doing a good job of giving a god's eye view of RSS. Very newsgator oriented, with a bit of a sales pitch thrown in.

A lot of time is taken up with talk of gadgets/wdigets. Very popular apparently and some examples taken from Newsgator clients.

The gadget stuff is interesting I must admit. I'd like to look into this a little further; Emerald Gadgets for placing personal homepages - How would this work with firewalls and institutional subscriptions?

The newsgator widget creator (Editors desk) is looking kinda buggy but the idea is a sound one - I'll be following this up at a later date.

Moving onto how to get started with RSS for publishers - for marketeers I think.

This was a high level intro to RSS and for that level it was pretty good. I think we're a little ahead of the curve for the most part - use and knowledge of RSS within Emerald is beyond the novice level and the commitments to extend RSS for 2008 is good evidence of that. The widget/gadget things, although not unknown to me, looked really interesting. Perhaps more sustainable than RSS itself, in fact a great RSS application people can use intuitively without any knowledge of RSS at all.

 

 

Posted by Paul Coyne | 0 comment(s)
Bookmark and Share

May 21, 2007

From Scott Karp's Publishing 2.0 : The Value of Aggregating Content

 

Quote : "Digital media has unbundled content, disrupting legacy businesses that sell bundled media like albums and newspapers. But that doesn’t mean there is no value in bundling content, as Nick Carr observes in a lyrical deconstruction of David Weinberger’s assertion that the track is the natural unit of music."

I really like this posting. Two positions are outlined in it.

First David Weinberger's argument that the natural unit of commercial music is not the Long-Playing album, but the individual track. See itunes.

Second, Nick Carr rebutts David's position. Actually I'm not sure Nick offers a serious counter-argument other than to point out that for economic reasons it's too early to jump on the grave LP's just yet.

And finally Scott offers an analysis of how own, highlighting the fact that itune is in fact an agregator; the difference being the individual now aggregates/bundles the tracks to his own desire.

From the posting:

Disaggregation — taking apart media — is only step one of the media revolution. Step two — or 2.0 — is finding dynamic ways to put it back together.

This is one of those subjects that, without being able to articulate it, I feel has real relevance to my own industry - scholarly journal publishing. If the Academic Journal, much like the LP, has a history of development tied into the economics of content production, printing and delivery which in a few years time might not be sustainable, what is the alternative?

Will be looking to develop these thoughts over the summer.

Filed under: aggregation, articles, disaggregation, itunes, Publishing 2.0

Posted by Paul Coyne | 0 comment(s)
Bookmark and Share

May 16, 2007

This article is a complete reprint of George Siemens article, 'Scholarship in an age of participation'. reproduced under the terms of granted by his Creative Commons Licence

George Siemens
March 27, 2007

Journals are an essential and trusted aspect of knowledge growth and dissemination. New discoveries, advances in disciplines, and critical solutions to complex problems find their home in academic journals. The future language and concepts of science and society often find their first life in peer review and formal publication. Citations are the heart of the process - establishing reputations and providing the infrastructure for knowledge growth and information integrity.

Eugene Garfield’s Journal Impact Factor (JIF) utilizes citation analysis to determine (obviously) the impact of the journal. Larry Page’s (of Google) insight into the value of links (backrub as was his initial term) as a means of determining authority altered web search and online information access (John Battelle). By treating each link as a citation, and determining value of a web page based on incoming links, web sites are assigned a "page rank" similar to Garfield’s JIF.

Citations and weblinks are the lubricant of knowledge growth. Yet journals - the vehicle of citations - possess a weakness derived from the structured process of review and publishing. The methodical process of submission - editor evaluation, numerous reviews, and finally (possibly) publishing - is intended to filter those ideas lacking solid research or possessing faulty reasoning. The process is time consuming. Publication can take from six to twelve months (in some cases even longer).

The process itself can be frustrating for authors, with limited opportunities to address faults of, or engage in dialogue around, anonymous reviews. Peer review suffers challenges similar to any aspect of society - where power and knowledge aggregate, there is room for abuse and misuse. What peer review does offer is an element of transparency and authority from experts. The informalization of information, as evidenced by increased use of informal citations in student papers, growth of Wikipedia, and use of Google for research, presents new challenges. The basis of peer review and the architecture of citations are critical for academic discourse. Our challenge is one of preserving the value of traditional approaches, while utilizing the best of emerging approaches.

Trends influencing formal publication

Four significant trends are creating conditions of change in academic journals:

  • Growth of information,
  • Expectation of participation,
  • Increased openness,
  • Two-way flow

Growth of Information
The growth of information hardly requires proof – we feel it in our daily lives. The growth of multi-media, internet, information management systems, advanced search engines, and academic contributions from emerging economies are only a few of the changes making their presence known in our personal lives. Our personal experience is validated with numerous studies. A research project at University of California at Berkeley stated that the global information base grew 75% from 2000 to 2002. A recent IDC report predicts a six-fold increase in digital information between 2006 and 2010.

The argument for change is simple: When characteristics and context of knowledge – the core element of the journal process – change, the processes, tools, and institutions which interact with knowledge must change as well.

Expectation of participation
Late last year, Time Magazine declared “you” – the amateur journalist, podcaster, blogger, wikipedia editor, and those who contributed to, and created the current participatory culture – its Person of the Year. The digital habits of many online participants have changed. No longer are we satisfied to simply consume the content of others. We desire to create, to participate, to collaborate, and to be involved. In many cases, content consumption is blended with content creation - a culture of create, co-create, and re-create.

Increased openness
Growing concern about the public “paying twice” for information (once in the research dollars to fund the research and again in reading the research in a journal) is driving a shift in open access in educational materials.

Peter Suber states that:

Open Access (OA) “is compatible with copyright, peer review, revenue (even profit), print, preservation, prestige, career-advancement, indexing, and other features and supportive services associated with conventional scholarly literature. The primary difference is that the bills are not paid by readers and hence do not function as access barriers.”

Two-way flow
Tim Berners-Lee’s intent with the web was not to create a broadcast medium, but instead to create a read-write medium. While this vision languished for many years, partly due to the complexity of technology and publishing and partly due the "architecture of participation" being unformed. The last five years have largely attended to these challenges. Social software enables anyone to setup and publish his or her ideas. Many news sites now offer discussions around articles and audio and video files. As Public Library of Science demonstrates, formal, peer reviewed journal articles benefit from annotation and commenting features. Essentially, the two-way flow, read-write nature of scholarly communication removes “established knowledge” from the pedestal where only select few can comment.

Implications
For many, the citations of formal journals have given way to the page rank of Google, or the tags of Technorati. Journal citations are the specialty of a small segment of society – the academically proficient. Technorati, Google, and del.icio.us are the citation machines of the masses. The filtering performed by journals – through editorial and peer review – tests information before it enters the public sphere. Today’s online publishing tools enable anyone to publish, and testing and validation of information occurs through the actions of many (links, comments, blog posts, or social bookmarks).

The rigid, sometimes restrictive, nature of journals results in learners often soliciting more accessible and less complex sources of information. A large part of the challenge stems from lack of learner familiarity with the process of peer review – a key information literacy weakness. A process more in line with the spaces and tools of learners today – situated in a community-based environment – may prove to be an important resource in setting the foundation for the next generation of researchers and academics – blending the value of emerging tools with the proven model of review and citations.

Existing in two worlds
Numerous disciplines are facing a foundational shift in their method, process, and end user. Music, newspaper, television, radio and movie industries are embroiled in core redefinition of how they relate to their customers. Google has altered basic information search, and now threatens to alter academic search as well (through Google Scholar and Book Search).

Against this backdrop of changing end-user expectations, developing technologies, and changed flow of information, academic journals must adjust to retain their relevance. The changes moving forward require a balance of honoring what has worked well with journals – peer review and the citation model in particular – and adopting those democratic elements revealed in Amazon’s reviews (though anonymous), Digg’s rating, and Wikipedia’s collaboration. We need to begin experimenting with our scholarly routines to reflect the needs of today’s researchers, learners, and society.

The value of journals is not in question. The process and pace of journal development, however, is experiencing increasingly difficult challenges. The pace of journal publication is too slow in many fields. Ideas that have been discussed at length in online forums, blogs, and conferences often only appear in journals several years later. The process concerns are based on blind review and lack of community participation and discussion.

The fault lines of “expert vs. amateur”, “genius vs. community”, formal vs. informal, need not be drawn thickly. Instead of separate and opposing camps, a gradient model of shades perhaps best reflects a suitable model for moving forward. By keeping our feet in two worlds - citation and review of traditional journals as well as participative, open emerging models - we are able to attend to broad range of needs for academics and today's learners.

Academic Scholarship Today
Blending the best of traditional journals with emerging tools of managing high levels of information presents unique opportunities for moving journals forward as a cornerstone for information creation, dissemination, and sharing.

The following are guiding principles are suggested:

  1. Two-fold model: peer-reviewed and informal commons
  2. Open reviews
  3. Meta-Reviews
  4. Discussion
  5. Annotation
  6. Journal as community

Two-paths
Our need for scholarly work runs on varying gradients between formal and informal. The easy access of search engines and sites like Wikipedia, provide a simple access point to “quick and dirty” information. More involved research (such as writing a thesis or submitting an article for formal publication) requires greater use of traditional scholarship. Our knowledge need drives the tool we require. As many bloggers have discovered, peer review can help to shape and create ideas prior to publication (Chris Anderson's book Long Tail).

To attend to this dual need for information, a journal should permit traditional peer-review, as well as the informal review of the commons. As detailed in Figure 1 of a proposed flow of a "current journal", an author has the option of submitting a document for either formal review or commons review (though even the formal article ends in the commons after review). Articles that initiate in the commons can be moved through the formal peer process if the author chooses (and the community rates the article sufficiently well). Readers of the journal will rate articles posted into the commons (similar to Stumbleupon or Amazon rating or the Digg metric of raising the profiles of articles ranked by the community). Articles that are established are then published in the online journal as well as a paper journal. OJR forms the base of the system.

Open reviews
Anonymous review is frequently criticized as a limitation of journals. Journals need to make the comments of all reviewers public in order to form the basis of deep dialogue. No source of information should receive a privilege status. All information is available to democratic dialogue.

Meta reviews
Healthy systems permit feedback. Members of a community require the ability to “review the review”. This may be a controversial approach – the anonymity of reviewers enables expression of ideas that may be difficult in open public forums. As a democratic model, however, the ability to rate the value of each review is important. Even experts are not immune from changing pressures to the creation and dissemination of information. Editors, journalists, researchers, and others are subject to the back channel models of evaluation.

Discussion
Articles, which have gone through the commons or the formal review process, are subject to annotation and discussion. Any member of the journal community has the ability to comment on the articles, and engage the author and community members in discussion. Discussions are appended to each article. Discussions of a more general or cross article nature can be held in separate forums.

Annotation
Annotations differ from discussion in the granularity of focus. Annotations focus on or address a single idea – a statistic, citation, or comment. Public Library of Science uses an annotation system where a blue asterisk is placed inline to alert readers to an annotation.

Journal as community
A journal is an opportunity to move beyond content or information consumption. While “community” and “journal” may not appear to fit together well, journals typically bring together the prominent thinkers and interested stakeholders of a discipline. Enlarging the conversation of journals to include deep discourse on articles and annotation throughout, sets the basis for a democratic, social model of scholarship.

The Model:

The model and process of the proposed journal is as follows (based on OJS flow) :

Figure 1: Suggested Process and Flow of Journals Today

Challenges
The established structure of peer review and academic publication is a difficult place for experimentation of new ideas. Nature’s experiment with open review resulted in poor researcher and reader involvement: of 1369 papers, only 5% agreed to open peer review. Of those, only 54% received comments. The poor showing of articles submitted to open review led the publishers of Nature to conclude: “[We] will continue to explore participative uses of the web. But for now at least, we will not implement open peer review.”

Poor performance of Nature’s foray into openness could be due to numerous factors: apathy on the part of community members (wishing to read instead of participate), uncertainty of the process, researcher’s reluctance to put ideas into public spaces before peer review, the nature of the discipline (fields of philosophy and psychology, for example, may foster more formative discussion as compared with hard sciences), and general lack of familiarity with participative processes. Nature’s experience provides important consideration in continued experimentation to revise the nature of scholarship. For the proposed journal discussed next, it is hoped that greater reliance on community will serve as the crucial element in increasing dialogue.

Next Steps
Theory finds its fullness in application. The interplay between theoretical constructs and the lessons learned in application require a malleable approach to journal formation. Issues of identity, fairness, civility, and engaging in democratic environments, require dialogue and an adaptive approach. Quite simply – as academics, we do not have a clear model of implementation for scholarship in light of current online trends. We need to adopt and experimental approach of sensing, evaluating, and responding to trends. Beyond being a community, the proposed journal is emergent – reflective of, and responsive to, the community it serves.

The dramatic changes to how information and knowledge are created, disseminated, and consumed are forcing traditional industries (and any information structure) to change as well. The experiences of newspapers, journalism, the music and movie industries, can serve as an indication to the types of changes academics face. Perhaps, instead of banning participatory sites, we can avoid mistakes of others, and begin experimenting with models of adaptation that preserve the best of tradition, while simultaneously incorporating new approaches to knowledge creation and dissemination.

Your Involvement
The principles discussed in this paper form the basis of a collaborative project between North American and European researchers and academics. We are requesting involvement from individuals interested in contributing to the development of the journal – enlarging its representation to include a global audience. If you would like to participate in discussions to shape the journal itself, or subsequent involvement in the community, please let us know. The application of ideas, of course, tests, informs, and revises theory. The journal will focus on emerging trends in educational technology and pedagogy, exploring fields of social software, connectivism, and networked learning. The current group of journal founders has established a conversation space (you are invited to create an account and contribute to the conversation. If you have specific questions, please email me). We will use Open Journal System as the base of the journal, with modifications to allow for dialogue, annotation, and the process detailed in Figure 1 of this article. Our intent is to provide a journal free of charge to authors and readers (many open journal models charge authors or institutions, not readers - while this is a viable model, our experiment is focused on volunteer efforts).

Filed under: Articles, Issue, Journals, open review, peer review, Publishing, Publishing 2.0

Posted by Paul Coyne | 0 comment(s)
Bookmark and Share

This posting from the 'Eclectic Librarian' talks about the changes in how journals will be published in the future. The electronic format suits the nature of journals very well, and the trend towards born digital content is plainly glaring us in the face.
However, one thing I have not heard discussed much is what this is doing to the concept of units within a journal.Will we continue the arcane practice of breaking up journals into discrete volumes and issues? I don't think so. Already we are seeing publishers take advantage of the electronic format by providing access (for subscribers) to articles in press prior to the actual publication date of the issue. I think that eventually, the journal as an entity will be comprised of an editorial board and review process, with a certain quantity of articles per year made available to subscribers as they clear that process.
Unless an issue has a particular theme, there's almost no need to maintain the discreteness of paper publishing in the electronic world. Sure, we'll need identifiers for citations and references and such, but we have that already with the DOI and OpenURL frameworks.

And besides, if students no longer think of the journal as an entity, then eventually researchers will do the same because today's students are tomorrow's content providers.

Via eclectic librarian: the future of the journal

 

 

Posted by Paul Coyne | 0 comment(s)
Bookmark and Share

<< Back