Evernote to the Fore
“Build products people lust after”
This is the advice given by the founders of Atlassian during the Atlassian Starter Day conference and it spurred me to write about Evernote (with a dash of Safari 5).
I have had Evernote on my laptop for a while but since I have been using my iphone more recently I’ve really become enamoured with Evernote.
BookCamp Halifax (#bchfx10): The Value of Community
Super Saturday a Little More Suped Up
We the Supply Chain
Say Hello to the Copyright Modernization Act
App vs. EPUB: Which Is Best for Your Book?
These statements probably sound familiar:
“I need to digitize my entire backlist! I’m converting everything to ePub. Find that book from 1973, cut the spine, scan it…”
“I’ll only make apps—no ePub for my books. Apps, apps, apps: I love apps.”
I hate both of these statements. They lead publishers who maybe aren’t so tech-savvy to believe that it has to be one or the other, or, even worse, that they have to digitize their books no matter what. But, why ?
New ONIX Tools...Now with 3.0
IDPF Digital Book 2010: A Short Recap
Confluence As a Web-Based Publishing System
In conferences and sessions we often discuss XML based publishing workflows…a concept I love, but I term I hate. Concept — content that is single sourced, marked up and is used to drive a plethora of end uses (i.e. pbook, ebook, web content, app, etc…). Why do I hate it? It is scary, maybe not to everyone, but to enough people in the “content business” that the term itself can often kill any hope of implementation.
Here’s why we need solutions that take the scary out of XML publishing workflows.

