Highlights
- Porter Anderson, Publishing Perspectives, “While You Were in Frankfurt: Sprint Beyond the Book”
- Ariel Bogle, Slate/Future Tense, “Jonathan Franzen’s Worst Nightmare”
- Cory Doctorow, BoingBoing, “Microsoft Word Considered Harmful”
- Joey Eschrich, ASU News, “ASU project explores the future of publishing”
- Ed Finn and Joey Eschrich, Slate/Future Tense, “The Word E-Book Should Be Replaced with CodeX”
- Jane Friedman, The Virginia Quarterly Review, “Seventy-Two Hours on the Future of Publishing (Day 1)”
- Dan Gillmor, Slate/Future Tense, “A Book Is Never Really Done”
Full Coverage to Date
- Porter Anderson, PorterAnderson.com, “At Frankfurt: Sprint Beyond the Book”
- Porter Anderson, Publishing Perspectives, “Ether for Authors: Is It Time for Publishing to Call a Truce?”
- Porter Anderson, Publishing Perspectives, “While You Were in Frankfurt: Sprint Beyond the Book”
- Porter Anderson, Workflow: ePublishing, “While You Were in Frankfurt: Sprint Beyond the Book”
- Ariel Bogle, Slate/Future Tense, “Jonathan Franzen’s Worst Nightmare”
- Carolyn Burns Bass, “LitChat: on the Future of Reading, Writing and Publishing” (Twitter forum)
- Cory Doctorow, BoingBoing, “Microsoft Word Considered Harmful”
- Cory Doctorow, BoingBoing, “Rise of predatory, parasitic spambooks”
- Joey Eschrich, ASU News, “ASU project explores the future of publishing”
- Joey Eschrich, ASU News, “Beyond the book: How will we read and write in the future?”
- Ed Finn and Joey Eschrich, Slate/Future Tense, “The Word E-Book Should Be Replaced with CodeX”
- Jane Friedman, JaneFriedman.com, “Self-Publishing: Is It the Most Important Conversation for Traditional Publishers?”
- Jane Friedman, JaneFriedman.com, “Thinking Beyond the Book: The Future of Publishing”
- Jane Friedman, The Virginia Quarterly Review, “Seventy-Two Hours on the Future of Publishing (Day 1)”
- Jane Friedman, The Virginia Quarterly Review, “Seventy-Two Hours on the Future of Publishing (Day 2)”
- Jane Friedman, The Virginia Quarterly Review, “Seventy-Two Hours on the Future of Publishing (Day 3)”
- Jane Friedman, The Virginia Quarterly Review, “Is Self-Publishing the Most Important Transformation in the Publishing Industry?”
- Michael Froomkin, Discourse.net, “A Nightmare Scenario”
- German WOTD, “Barbarisch, nicht gezähmt, verwildert, wildlebend, wild”
- Dan Gillmor, Slate/Future Tense, “A Book Is Never Really Done”
- Dan Gillmor, DanGillmor.com, “An Author-Centric Ecosystem”
- Dan Gillmor, DanGillmor.com, “Authors: Develop communities, not just audiences”
- Dan Gillmor, DanGillmor.com, “What is a book? Discuss.”
- Nate Hoffelder, The Digital Reader, “Do We Really Need a New Term for eBook?”
- Johannes Kleske, Third Wave Berlin, “What we read this week (11 October)”
- Sonia Lombardo, Storia Continua, “Fiera del Libro di Francoforte, 2 giorni per cambiare il futuro dell’editoria”
- Sonia Lombardo, Storia Continua, “Narrativa interattiva: i lettori vogliono davvero essere coinvolti nel processo di scrittura?”
- Paul St. John Mackintosh, “Frankfurt Book Fair Gets Athletic With Sprint Beyond the Book” (Re-posted at a number of sites including i4u News, Workflow: ePublishing, and Inbox Robot)
- Adam Oxford, htxt.africa “Sci-fi author Charlie Stross pens definitive MS Word takedown”
- Simon Sharwood, The Register, “MS Word deserves DEATH says Brit SciFi author Charles Stross”
- Christian Sidjani, Schreib Studio Blog, “Wer entscheidet darüber, was publiziert wird?”
- Sukhpreet Singh, CREATe, “‘Polemic: how readers will discover books in the future’ by Charlie Stross”
- Charlie Stross, Charlie’s Diary, “Another deceptively simple question”
- Charlie Stross, Charlie’s Diary, “Do Zimboes dream of Electric Sheep?”
- Charlie Stross, Charlie’s Diary, “Polemic: how readers will discover books in the future”
- Charlie Stross, Charlie’s Diary, “Upcoming appearance: Frankfurt Book Fair”
- Charlie Stross, Charlie’s Diary, “Why Microsoft Word must Die”
- John Taube, Allegany County Library System Director’s Notes, “Reading about eReading this week: October 14, 2013”
- Ben Walsh, Counterparties/Reuters, “Dimon in the rough”