The interview followed Jim's emailing me a New York Times
blog piece titled «Does the Brain Like E-Books?»
Not exact matches
Jonathan S. Tobin, the senior editor of the
blog of the conservative Jewish magazine Commentary, published a
piece on the survey shortly after its appearance,
titled «The Beginning of the End for Liberal Jewry.»
If one reads the
title of this
piece, it would not be too far fetched to assume that readers might think they have entered an Arsenal / Chelsea fans
blog site by accident, as this is a topic which has been a bug bear for Arsenal fans during their trophy drought ridden years.
However, Jalopnik, a popular automotive
blog owned by Gawker Media, recently published a
piece titled «The Best Driving Road Ever: In Illinois?»
1) Produce lots of
titles to increase name recognition and sales overall; 2) Lower your price point and the readers will follow; 3) Don't worry about pricing, just focus on great writing; 4) Be a guest blogger, have your own
blog, tweet, join forums, talk to readers, get reviews; 5) Use your ebook as a promotional
piece to sell classes, services, and other products; 6) There is no magic bullet, just keep doing everything and eventually you'll break through.
Update, 8:18 p.m. The American Meteorological Society responded to this post with a
piece on its Front Page
blog tonight on «gender imbalance» in meteorology, alluding to a paper in press in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
titled «Women in Academic Atmospheric Sciences.»
Andrew Montford, on his BishopHill
blog, has since posted a
piece titled The Great Still.
Rick Santorum recently authored an anti-science
piece on the Red State
blog titled Blown and Tossed by the Winds of Political Correctness.
Poynter's MediaWire
blog also featured SCOTUSblog, in a
piece by Andrew Beaujon
titled, SCOTUSblog spent about $ 10,000 to keep site running during final days of Supreme Court term.
Greg Lambert crafted a well written and thought provoking
piece at 3 Geeks and a Law
Blog yesterday
titled «The 3 Foot Radius of the Law Library ``.
The 271 Patent
Blog posted an article about a
piece of intellectual property legislation with the
title «Patent Reform Act of 2007: Argle - Bargle or Foofaraw?»
The first item is David Lat's Op - Ed
piece in yesterday's New York Times,
titled The Supreme Court's Bonus Babies, which comments on the stratospheric bonuses of $ 250,000 that law firms are expected to pay to this year's crop of departing Supreme Court clerks (my colleague Bob Ambrogi posted on the topic of Supreme Court bonuses previously here, and WSJ Law
Blog readers discuss Lat's article here).
I started this
blog almost a year ago, on January 8, 2008 — after stocking the shelves with older articles I'd written elsewhere, I wrote a short
piece titled «Waking the neighbours,» the first of what would be scores of posts on a future legal profession that has been resolving itself into the present legal profession faster than anyone anticipated.