In the face of
the Internet publishing revolution and changing reader habits, newspapers have been slow to change.
Not exact matches
The self -
publishing revolution is (aside from the
Internet) the greatest thing ever to happen to freedom of speech and expression, but self -
published books are widely stigmatized as poorly produced.
In
internet - savvy circles [Amanda Hocking] has been embraced as a figurehead of the digital
publishing revolution that is seen as blowing up the traditional book world — or «legacy
publishing» as its detractors call it — and replacing it with the ebook, where direct contact between author and reader, free of the mediation of agent and
publishing house, is but a few clicks away.
Ransacked by the
internet and teetering on the edge of the real ebook
revolution, the
publishing world is understandably afraid of what's next.
This
internet revolution has really shaken up things in
publishing, hasn't it?
Earlier on
Publishing Perspectives («CES is not a Book Fair and Steve Jobs is no Joe Gutenberg «-RRB- I warned that the launch of Apple's
internet tablet would «likely be a
revolution in computing, not a
revolution in reading.»
Editorial by Edward Nawotka Earlier on
Publishing Perspectives («CES is not a Book Fair and Steve Jobs is no Joe Gutenberg «-RRB- I warned that the launch of Apple's
internet tablet would «likely be a
revolution in computing, not a
revolution in reading.»