If this were not true, then the only thing required to establish a hypothesis would be to
get it published somehow, somewhere.
Not exact matches
Somehow I
get the feeling that a lot fewer people read what we
publish than we'd like to think... a sobering thought for any professional communicator.
With traditional
publishing, you're at Cape Cod, and all the beaches are privately - owned, and the only way you can
get onto one and party is to
somehow luck into an invite to one of those swank - ass rich - people galas attended by, like, Al Gore.
In fact, it's an unfortunate myth that traditionally
published authors
somehow get to sit back and let the publisher make them into household names.
Gene Doucette has a pretty straight - forward defense of self -
publishing for those who think that
getting a traditional publisher makes your work
somehow «better.»
So the next time you
get the vibe from someone that your self -
published book is
somehow less than a major accomplishment, think about these authors.
Wattpad is an extremely successful digital
publishing site that
somehow doesn't seem to
get as much press as other well - known names like Smashwords, yet the company has 11 million monthly readers.
And when
somehow that fresh idea, fresh book does
get through an editor and
gets published, (In this new world, more than likely indie
published first), it will spawn (like a bad horror movie) thousands of «easy sell» books.
Not only must they write well, they also have to
get that writing out into the world
somehow (traditional
publishing, self -
publishing, or other alternatives like
publishing an online magazine).
When I was watching
published authors from the outside and wishing I could
get in, I definitely felt in some way that my work was lesser, or not worthy, or less significant
somehow.
You're doing this absurd thing where you're
somehow starting from the fact that self - publication is open to everybody, and so a lot of crap
gets through the lack of gatekeepers, and ending up in this mysterious land of illogic and sweeping generalization where therefore all self -
published work is crap.
Now I know I'm being wildly optimistic here, assuming that I will be able to find at least some success with self -
publishing, and that I will be one of the lucky few to hook an agent and then a publisher, and even that I will
somehow magically
get my butt in gear and suddenly become prolific.
What
publishing somehow needs to do is
get retailers and customers to understand that you
get what you pay for — and that quality is worth paying for.
If you were not in the lucky 1 - 3 % accepted by traditional
publishing houses, and if you wanted to
publish your work, you needed to
somehow get your book out there by self -
publishing whatever way you could.
He
somehow got his hands on a complete screenshot of Barclays» (presumably beta) website for the new card (DoC
published the...
I wonder how much of this information
gets lost before it's written or
published or transmitted
somehow.»
I really hope you
get your paper
published somewhere, it's important that things like this make their way into the literature
somehow no matter how many gatekeepers try to stop it.
That said, some of the responses posted here illustrate the deeper problem: that there are some not really open to reason, who are
somehow getting editorial space (even if they can't
publish significant research for whatever reason).
Since said scientist is second tier (at best) in her field but has a reputable academic position and has no problem
getting published, she must
somehow trigger at least the appearance of ostracism, retribution and tyranny at the hands of the «high priests of climate».
It's very easy to
get caught up in one's
publishing agenda, to * think * you're losing your subject focus, or come to the conclusion that social engagement
somehow doesn't look «professional».
The New York Times
published an article about tracking down life insurance policies that
somehow got lost in the shuffle during the insured's life, so that the beneficiaries didn't know where to find them or were even unaware of their existence.