ebooks are a new frontier, but they look a lot like the old web frontier, with HTML, CSS, and XML underpinning the main ebook standard, ePub. Yet there are key distinctions between ebook publishing’s current problems and what the web standards movement faced. The web was founded without an intent to disrupt any particular industry; it had no precedent, no analogy. E-reading antagonizes a large, powerful industry that’s scared of what this new way of reading brings—and they’re either actively fighting open standards or simply ignoring them. In part one of a two-part series in this issue, Nick Disabato examines the explosion in reading, explores how content is freeing itself from context, and mines the broken ebook landscape in search of business logic and a way out of the present mess.
- Adobe
- advertising-filled webpages
- Amazon
- Amazon Kindle
- Amazon.com
- Apple
- Barnes & Noble
- Cameron Koczon
- Chicago
- Computer file formats
- Culture State of the Web Process Business
- cumbersome systems
- Declaration of Independence
- Digital rights management
- E-book
- e-reader
- e-readers
- e-reading
- ebook distributor
- Educational Development Corporation
- Electronic publishing
- EPUB
- final retail price
- Frank Chimero
- Hachette
- HarperCollins
- HTML
- HTML
- Illinois
- International Digital Publishing Forum
- Internet Archive
- Kindle
- Linux based devices
- low retail prices
- Macmillan
- manufacturing
- Michael Hart
- Mike Monteiro
- Mobipocket
- Mule Design
- Newspaper Club
- Nick Disabato
- online documentation
- Open eBook
- Open formats
- page layout software
- Penguin Group
- Print-on-demand services
- Project Gutenberg
- Publishing
- Random House
- retail price
- same technologies
- Simon & Schuster
- smartphone
- suggested retail price
- Technology
- U.S. Department of Justice
- United States
- University of Illinois
- web developers
- Web development
- web frontier
- web standards movement
- XML
- XML
Design is on a roll. Client services are experiencing a major uptick in demand, seasoned design professionals are abandoning client work in favor of entrepreneurship, and designer-co-founded startups such as Kickstarter and Airbnb are taking center stage. It’s becoming increasingly difficult to ignore the fact that design has a massive role to play in the evolution of the web and the next generation of web products. The result, says Cameron Koczon, is that designers have now been given a blank check—one that lets web designers band together as a community to change the way design is perceived; change the way products are built; and quite possibly change the world.
- Airbnb
- American Society of Interior Designers
- Ben Pieratt
- brand new product
- Brooklyn
- Brooklyn Beta
- Cameron Koczon
- Client services
- Culture
- Culture Industry Process Business Creativity
- Design
- healthcare startups
- Imagine K
- Kickstarter
- Lisp programming language
- Mass media
- New York
- Paul Graham
- Paul Graham
- Rock Health
- Steve Jobs
- Structure
- TechStars
- Tony Fadell
- web
- web conference
- web products
- Y Combinator
- Yahoo!