3 steps to publishing revolution - by Cally Phillips
Step One. The tablet
comes full circle.
Warning. Stylistically this post is bound together only by
digressions. Maybe even digression ad
absurdum. It’s more knockabout than
reasoned debate. Just a few thoughts and
points dragged together by my synapses for your entertainment.
Look closely, this one's for you Lee! |
I’m guessing that many readers (do I have many readers
here?) will either have got or bought some form of tablet this festive
period. And I don’t mean the Scottish
kind that is a sickly sweet but addictive confection!
I thought it worthy of reflection – being as how Janus was
the God of looking backwards and forwards- and so for my first part of ‘3 steps
to publishing revolution’ (which will be, perhaps surprisingly, in 3 parts on this
site) I’ll start by looking at tablets.
In my self-styled role as retrospective prophet, I cry (usually
in the wilderness) that the days of the humble ereader are well nigh over. Who
wants a basic ereader when you can have an all singing, all dancing tablet? Let’s ignore the fact that the very thing
that made ereaders ‘great’ was their vaunted ‘as paper’ viewing interface and
forget that tablets are really designed for the consumption of movies etc and
so are just mini computer screens. That’s
just splitting hairs.
Writer, disturbed in the act of creation.. on OMG a 'netbook' How very 2011. |
My ears have never been good enough to warrant Bose (or
similar). Or even stereo really. Certainly not surround sound. This suggests to me that cut to the quick, technology
is only as good as the recipient. In my case, don’t waste your money on
expensive sound systems – just let me hear it and that’ll do me. This year my eyes have ‘transitioned’ – or
actually I have to say ‘got worse’ to the degree that I can finally
conclusively state that as with sound, for me, so with vision. No point me
having an HD screen, I don’t have eyes that can tell the difference. And while I can admit that my original Kobo
Touch had a nice screen (and you can read ebooks outside in the sun – on the
rare days that’s possible in this country) the 10 inch screen of the iPad has
won out for ease of reading. As long as I don’t read outside.
Books? Mugs? C'est un Pipe? |
Everyone knows you can’t read computer
screens outside, no matter what you do – and believe me I’ve tried
EVERYTHING. I have finally concluded that
this is actually nature’s way of telling me that when I’m outside I should be
working in the garden or reading a ‘real’ book. (note I'm sparing you the gardening pics!)
But what of the humble ereader you say? Kobo Touch or Kindle Paperwhite. Well, for me, I need a screen to be BIGGER.
Certainly more than 6 or 7 inches. At that size, to be able to read at a
resolution I am comfortable with I end up with about 3 words on a page and I’m
sorry, but they put 300-500 words on a page in paperback books for a reason you
know. I don’t read newspapers or
magazines primarily because I hate reading the little columns. And for me, if
reading is made more difficult by size of font or page or column, I just can’t
be bothered. I don’t know if I’m a) old
fashioned or b) just some kind of a freak but c) I just like to be able to read
a whole page of text on a page. I think it’s a combination of the way my brain
and eyes work together. I need to be
able to look at 10 or 11 point spread over a decent sized page to fully engage. Simple as. And losing myself in the world of the words is what I read for. So digital reading is only convenient for me
if the screen is of an acceptable size. And that seems to be 10 inches. I’m
sure it’s highly personal. I’m not advocating anything here, just stating my
personal preference.
It's tablet Jim, but not as we know it. |
It occurs to me that these days with digital technology (and
most other things) we can all more or less get more or less what we want more
or less all of the time. But have you
noticed, we never seem to be able to get exactly what we want ANY of the time. This is relevant to epublishing but to just
about everything else as well. I used to
call this the ‘post-perfect’ world, but I think it’s now more appropriately
called the ‘global impossible aspirational’ world into which vortex it seems
most people are sucked most of the time. I try to avoid it myself, but…
Read this book... it's great and it changed my life. |
What of the publishing revolution I hear you mutter… Well the scales fell from my eyes (figaratively of course) when I read Fifty Years in
the Fiction Factory, (by 'our own' Julia Jones) after which I embarked upon a
fairly in depth study of publishing history (and found an answer more profound - personally - than unlocking the code to the Rosetta Stone!). It was a great
adventure into the unknown for me. It changed my life. Really. Though I can't claim it will change YOUR life, I can recommend Fifty Years as a holiday destination
for the inquisitive mind of the modern writer and/or reader. Paperback or digital - either way the content is definitely King in this one. And the cover is great too isn't it?
Julia recently refered (on this site I think) to the 19th century as ‘The Great
Age of Print.’ I’ll get to that in step
two of my revolution but we need to walk before we run, yes? Or at least put
one foot in front of the other in some kind of chronologically ordered way? We are still in stepping our first step here remember? Which as everyone
knows was the invention by Guthenberg of the Printing Press in the 15th
century.
But wait a minute. What about BEFORE that. How about a bit of pre-history – since my ‘argument’
here such as it is, is going to show that the 3 steps of publishing revolution
are actually the completion of a circle. In the beginning was the tablet…
Tablet - from Mesopotamia. |
Because hundreds, nay thousands of years before old
Guthenberg, things were written on tablets.
Today, as far as I’m aware there is only one tablet you can actually
write ON. The Samsung Galaxy Note. It strikes me as rather a good concept, but
I haven’t actually seen or used one yet so I can’t give any guarantees. Whether
it would accept my handwriting via a stylus is unlikely – these days I can’t
even read my own handwriting!
The must have tablet for the writer c2014? |
But back in the day, I have been known to stand in awe in
front of the Rosetta Stone (about as portable as early mobile phones) and
various tablets of Linear B at Knossos. That was in the day when tablets were a
thing of ‘history’ whereas now they are the latest must-have gadget. Is it any
wonder I think that linear progression may not be all it’s cracked up to be –
that maybe we work in a more cyclical pattern than we are ever aware of. Which is possibly why stylistically I am
stumbling from digression to digression here in my revolutionary footsteps.
It’s not that I’ve lost sight of the linear argument, more that I’m losing
confidence in it as a style to deliver my message (or any message) in our
digital binary world.
Yay, this is something worth reading in any century! |
Well, okay, we all know the ‘ancients’ including of course
the Egyptians, Greeks and Romans used tablets. (Can you imagine the school
essay cribbed from this… ‘the ancient Egyptians got Samsung Galaxy tablets for
Xmas but the Romans preferred Android Ice Cream Sandwiches. The Greeks invented
the ipad because they were cool and the Christians invented the Apple. )
What has changed? Over time what we write has changed – but
we still keep records using symbols.
Guthenberg got rid of the tablet for a while with the printing press-
the first step towards ‘revolutionsing’ the way we read and write- but today
the real difference is that instead of writing on tablets the writing is ‘in’
them, flexibly. Is that not the joy of
binary and digital magic?
Back in the day Brand Loyalty was the only book on the shelf! Oh where are the heady days of 2010? |
You can carry
more books on a Kindle (other ereaders are available, no, really, they are and
they are quite good!) than ever existed when Guthenberg was a lad. Never mind the quality folks, feel the
width.
I’m drawing to a close here and you may feel cheated. I
haven’t really dealt with that FIRST publishing revolution at all, have I?
That’s because I’m assuming that just about everyone and his cousin knows all
about Guthenberg and the printing press
– if not I’m sure Wikipedia will fill you in. Because in our third digital age
the writing of ‘historical facts’ is less popular than polemic which is less popular than humour
and I made a promise to myself to try and write things people might actually
want to read in 2014.
HoAmPresst - homage to Guthenberg. |
Actually I made a promise to read much more than I write,
but the blog page mammon must be fed on a monthly basis so that’s why you’ve
got this. Make of it what you will. Next month we’ll get into the meat of the
Ice-Cream Sandwich and I’ll talk about what Julia describes as ‘The Great Age
of Print’ and what I, less prosaically call ‘The Second Publishing Revolution.’ Read it on tablet, on computer, on
smartphone, or don’t read it at all… it’s up to you.
Happy 2014 readers one and all. How, when, where and why ever you engage with reading this year, I wish you many happy hours in a whole range of worlds you never imagine existed. And in one sense never did. We live in a hugely divided world, but let's remember that as writers and more especially as readers, we have a shared love in common. Share the love in 2014 folks.
I'll be back with Step 2 next month. Enjoy your reading adventures till then.
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