December 4, 2004

scoble book

zzzzzz7654101.jpg
Robert Sco­ble and Shel Israel want to write a book about blog­ging. Robert wants me to do the dra­wings. How very cool!
Robert wants to write the whole book on his blog, wants to auc­tion off the rights on EBay– just go read the whole article. I can’t do it jus­tice. There’s some great ideas in it.
Meanwhile, Seth Godin explains why Chan­geThis only allows their con­tent (inc­lu­ding “How To Be Crea­tive”) on PDF for­mat, not HTML:

You don’t hear anyone whi­ning about books. You don’t hear about anyone sen­ding long, detai­led emails to book publishers explai­ning why they should aban­don prin­ted books and start publishing in HTML.
Any­way, we use PDFs because they’re a lot more boo­klike. They read bet­ter. They stick together when you for­ward them. They print bet­ter.
I know they’re not in HTML. There are 6 tri­llion other web pages to choose from if you want that.

“How To Be Crea­tive” was already pos­ted on gaping­void as HTML before it was up on Chan­geThis as a PDF. So hap­pily I didn’t have to choose “either/or”. Seth, being a book wri­ter, likes paper. I have no pro­blem with that. His web­site, his rules.
I like paper, too. Dra­wings etc.
[SPEAKING OF “MEDIA”:] Gia wrote something that REALLY got my atten­tion:
Gia lives in Lon­don, where she works in the TV industry. She’s one of Britain’s more res­pec­ted blog­gers.
Any­way, she was telling her TV collea­gues on an online TV-professionals forum all about blogs and what­not, how great they were, how use­ful they were etc:

…Once news­pa­pers (and then radio and tele­vi­sion) came about we, the peo­ple, lost all input into the media. Whe­reas in those cof­feehou­ses peo­ple could dis­cuss and debate, these days the media does that for us AND deci­des what topics are impor­tant and what are not.
Blogs have brought that full circle. We now seek out the topics we are inte­res­ted in AND are part of the debate.…

Then this is what killed me. One of the TV peo­ple replied:

That was a lovely his­tory les­son but I feel somewhat marred with delu­sions of gran­deur. Can this medium really have a genuine impact on the mas­ses or is it another inter­net flash in the pan fashion?

Yet one more rea­son why TV is dying. The peo­ple making it still see them­sel­ves as a bunch of entit­led, we-know-best eli­tes ser­ving “the mas­ses”.
“The mas­ses”. Heh. What a patro­ni­zing dickhead. What a loser. What a com­plete dino­saur. I meet these kind of peo­ple all the time and they’re pathetic.

6 Responses to “scoble book”

  1. Brandon Blatcher says:

    Well, yeah, no one com­plains about books because the entire pro­cess of making books lea­ves very few options.
    Put­ting something on the web gives a publisher more options pdf, html, flash etc. all are use­ful and have their place.
    the pro­blem with the PDFs on chan­gethis is that they gene­rally suck. they’re very pretty, but i don’t need a pdf taking over my entire screen thank you. and if i see one i like and want to quote, it’s har­der to link to.
    htlm is just there, all ready to read. if you’re trying to change minds, why not do it in the easiest for­mat that will reach the most peo­ple, i.e. html. stop trying to impose design stan­dards on your con­tent and let the con­tent soar.

  2. Piers Fawkes says:

    Viva La Revolucion!

  3. daniel says:

    We all know the truth: Seth Godin hates trees as much as George Bush does! Drill in the natio­nal forests! Only pro­vide PDF’s! What’s next?!
    And appa­rently without a prin­ter you can ChangeFuckAll.

  4. public(MIND) says:

    It seems that we have a little com­pe­ti­tion going on.

    UPDATE I just lear­ned that there a one more ini­tia­tive on it’s way — Cool…;-) —- It reminds me on the early Reboot days in Den­mark where we had this web-development com­pe­ti­tion bet­ween a team from West Den­mark com­pe­ting against…

  5. Ben Hamilton says:

    I’m not so keen on PDF’s, I’d pre­fer to see HTML & PDF. But what really gets my goat is that on chan­gethis, I can’t down­load the PDF without ope­ning it in a brow­ser win­dow.
    Sure, I get around it by loo­king at the source code of the page, figu­ring out the link and down­loa­ding it directly, but for dozen or so peo­ple I’ve spo­ken with, most would pre­fer a have a choice, to open the PDF in the brows­wer win­dow, or to down­load for rea­ding later (they ALL (bar one) also said they’d pre­fer a HTML ver­sion).
    I enjoy rea­ding what Seth & Co are upto, but it’d be nice if they made it easier for me.

  6. Get comfy!

    hugh mac­leod men­tions a book colla­bo­ra­tion effort via blog­ging here and here. I’m intri­gued with the idea of seeing the pro­cess of deve­lo­ping a book unfold on a blog so I hope this will pan out. The weird thing in rea­ding the new url for the blog (htt…