The Ulysses Project Has Moved

The Ulysses Project has moved to www.difficultbooks.com.

The Project Has Moved to Difficultbooks.com

I've been trying to get this site to work like a wiki so that users could help me annotate Ulysses. But it's not working. Instead, I've started a new site dedicated to this project: www.difficultbooks.com.

Open Source Social Networking

My good friend Philip Clarke turned me onto ELGG, an open source social networking platform.

This sort of application would be useful for publisher to develop brand loyalty. Collaborative book clubs are the first thing that comes to mind. But there must be hundreds of other uses.

The main point is that these applications would change the way a publisher is perceived. Instead of being seen as a faceless corporation, publishers could use these applications to build communities around its content.

Open Source and the Small Publisher

Resources for starting a publishing company from scratch

Can you start a publishing company with little-to-no working capital?

Why not?

Conventional wisdom will tell you that publishing is a capital-intensive business. The up-front costs of producing, manufacturing, warehousing, promoting and shipping a publication are prohibitive for everyone except the biggest publishers. The last few decades have seen significant consolidation in the industry. And with each new merger, the argument is the same: only through economies of scale can publishers remain profitable.

I don't buy that argument.

Free Marketplace of Ideas versus The Market Value of Ideas

Thoughts about Epstein’s Book Business and Schiffrin’s The Business of Books

Innovation and the Future of e-Books

Here's another interesting piece I found on the 'net today: Innovation and the Future of e-Books by John Warren.

Finding a Webhost

I would like this website to grow beyond my Masters program at the George Washington University. The subject of starting a publishing company seems so rich with information that I could mine it for a long time to come. The main advantage is that the page starts at ground zero; this is the first attempt at a website, and it will grow as I learn more about this stuff.

Anyway, the next steps is to buy a domain name or two and find a web host. Right now the site is sitting comfortably on the GW server. But I graduate this summer and will lose access. So, how do I find a good web host? What can I expect to pay? What services are provided?

Jason Epstein at the Tools for Change

Jason Epstein is always interesting. This talk he gave at the Tools for Change meeting is good stuff.

Lately I've been focusing on the possibility of start-up publishers using open source as a means to save cost. But I'm interested in the whole problem of how someone would start a publishing company with little to no capital. This includes non-traditional business models.

Where do blog authoring tools belong?

Today I came across a couple of open source blog authoring applications: Movable Type and WordPress. Both applications are described as "publishing platforms," though I'll have to play with them to see what that means exactly.

I suspect that they are basically web CMS applications with limited functions. That's fine, but I wonder how well they would integrate with a more fully functioning CMS like Drupal.

OS DreamWeaver Alternatives

The webdistortion blog has an articles that will be interesting to explore further: Web Design on a Buget (6 Free Alternatives to DreamWeaver).

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