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DCLnews
Exclusive:
Columbia
University Press compiling customizable guide to digital publishing
Columbia's
forthcoming ready reference to e-publishing will be a completely
customizable experience - DCLnews brings
you
a sneak preview...
DIGITAL
PUBLISHING
is undoubtedly going to have an enormous impact on every aspect of
the bookworld - from the commercial and academic to business and
self-publishing. Admittedly there's presently a feeling of gloom in
the eBook "bestseller" market due to lack of sales. But in
other sectors of publishing, digital publications are already an
integral part of the industry.
Indeed,
many publishers, editors, and authors are being asked to alter their
working practises to fit in with the requirements of electronic
publishing. These changes aren't big - in many cases they are almost
imperceptible. But they are a telling sign that changes are in the
air in publishing.
If
you're in the publishing world you might well be apprehensive about
entering the world of e-publications. Wondering whether you will have
to learn new IT skills? Adapt to new programs? Or whether you will be
able to stick with using QuarkXpress and Microsoft Word? At the very
least, you will want to know how digital publishing works and get a
better grasp of XML and SGML, the computer languages used to
"markup" documents so they can easily and quickly be
published in different formats.
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>>>FACT
FILE |
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Mark
Gross, President of Data Conversion Laboratory is one of the
contributors to The Columbia Guide To Digital Publishing, as
is Bill Kasdorf,
President, Impressions Book and Journal Services. |
Columbia
Guide to Digital Publishing
Currently
the information available on digital publishing is technical to the
point of being esoteric. But all that is about to change with the
release in early 2003 of The Columbia Guide To Digital Publishing (Columbia
University Press), which will be published simultaneously in
print and online versions. Written by professionals from the digital
publishing/conversion world, the book is intended as a ready
reference for authors, writers, editors, and other publishing
professionals. It goes into the nuts-and-bolts of manuscript
preparation, editing, production, publication, and distribution of
written and graphic material in digital format.
Customizable
To
find out more I talked to Stephen Sterns, Project Editor of The
Columbia Guide To Digital Publishing, who believes the design of
the Guide offers the ideal combination of print and online
publications. "The online version will take full advantage of
today's digital media, allowing the print version to be very
straightforward and simple," he says.
The
web version of the Guide will be highly innovative and will
provide a high level of functionality, including the ability for each
user to customize the book to reflect their interests. "If a
corporation or institution decide
they want to have a subscription so the website is on every
employees' computer, each of those employees will be able create
their own personal edition of the Guide," explains
Sterns. "They will have their own personal area where they can
save searches and link to specific text they want to refer to again.
Plus we will be able to alert those users when content they're
interested in has been updated."
Being
able to update content as and when you need to is one of the great
strengths of e-publications. And it is particularly important in the
technical field, which seems to change almost by the nano-second.
Early
adapters
Columbia
University Press were one of the first publishers to embrace
electronic publishing and put their content into structured computer
languages like SGML and (more recently) XML. Their flagship
publication, The Columbia Encyclopedia, for example, has been
produced in SGML for the last two editions. In fact, a
leading figure in the development of SGML, Eric Van Herwijnen
(author of "Practical SGML"), helped develop the
original DTD
(Document Type Definition) for it.
Seamless
conversion
With The
Columbia Guide To Digital Publishing, Columbia University Press
are "practising what they preach" by producing the book
with much of the technology and applications that form the subject
matter of the book.
Sterns
describes one of the ways this works in practise: "Both authors
and editors are using specially designed templates which customize
Microsoft Word. The templates make development of content extremely
easy - for example, there are handy toolbars, clear and simple
styles, and no cumbersome coding to have to contend with. In fact,
some authors say the templates make Word a lot easier to use!"
Sterns goes on to explain that the templates generate XML, making the
conversion process seamless - and also allowing for easy updates of material.
The
Columbia Guide To Digital Publishing will essentially be a
working example of what can be done in digital publishing - and will
lead the way for others wishing to explore ways of taking what we
today know as "books" into the future. It could even prove
to be one of the catalysts that kickstarts the eBook revolution...
DCLnews
Editorial
DCLnews
will keep you updated on the progress of The Columbia Guide To
Digital Publishing - and will run a special feature to mark its publication.
Click
here to Visit the Columbia
University Press website.
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