Sentences with phrase «reader end of the industry»

Not exact matches

The principles of investment are simple, says Bernstein, so he takes a long view of the financial industry, dedicating half the book to investment history and theory (in a manner accessible to the math - challenged among us) in the hopes of giving his readers «the ability to coolly observe extraordinary current events and say «I've seen this movie before, and I know how it ends.»»
While the mass migration to the paywall model may be a seismic shift for the news consumers, for the news industry it's less an end than it is a beginning — the start of a mad hustle to find revenue from readers in as many ways and as many forms as possible.
Author, agents, and publishers can argue all they want while the industry watchers report on it, but at the end of the day, the reader simply does not care how the book was published.
The other scenario, where there are no agents, and everyone can just pour their books onto the Net on haphazard sites; where there is no clear way for a reader to sift through the hundreds of thousands of books that will be out there; where you will waste your time downloading things that sound okay, but end up being grammatically unreadable because they haven't been through any sort of editorial process — this is what will kill the book industry.
That, too, we may need to learn all over again as readers of literature become consumers interacting with their authors, not just the end - user of a big industry apparatus.
Some of the readers will probably turn back to paper, but not too many, definitely not enough to say: the end of the digital publishing industry.
With so much discussion in the industry about reasons for authors to choose indie publishing over traditional, many authors and readers alike tend to overlook the fact that the end result of a traditional publishing deal only comes about after a publisher has signed the author's book.
Since the early - to - mid 1980's improvements in computer hardware and software have radically changed the throughput of published materials from author to reader... It's ludicrous that to be involved in the technology end of the book industry, you need to be a member of five or six trade organizations.
Any time I check consumer (not industry) reviews of Kobo e-readers I see lots of complaints to the end of «this firmware update completely wrecked things» or «kobo readers die soon after the warranty expires.»
At the end of the day, the readers don't want the industry's agonies, they want good books.
To that end, the final page of the The Multiversity # 1 left readers with the ultimate responsibility of how their comics unfold, which may just as easily be a piece of industry commentary as it is an expression of a deeply held philosophy.
Corpwriting's creative writers have the key skills to fish out relevant information about the service, industry or platform to provide ample information without boring the reader and making an impact at the end to instill a feeling of connection with your brand.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z