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Books on Tap: A New Twist on Print on Demand

According to an article in the April 24 issue of the Guardian, it’s now possible to have a machine print you “any of 500,000 titles while you wait.”

On Demand Books, the manufacturers of the Espresso Book Machine, known to its friends as EBM, call their device “an ATM for books.” The brochure and spec sheet for the device claims that EBM “can automatically print, bind, and trim on demand at point of sale perfect-bound library-quality paperback books with 4-color covers … in minutes for a production cost of a penny a page.” The brochure mentions that EBM has a “strategic alliance” with major book distributor Ingram Book Group.

Print on demand (POD) publishing has been around for a while now, with companies such as Cafe Press and Lulu.com, among others, giving ordinary people a chance to publish and distribute their books of memoirs, poetry, scholarly research, artwork, or just about anything. The EBM itself has been in use since 2007, though primarily in libraries and bookstores.

EBM offers access to 500,000 titles, with plans to offer “nearly two million titles.” Google Book Search already offers online access to over two million books.

Thanks to my friends at Sonoma State University Library for the pointer to this article.

Sources

Alison Flood, Revolutionary Espresso Book Machine Launches in London, Guardian, April 24, 2009.
Espresso Book Machine 2.0 brochure and spec sheet and FAQ, On Demand Books, 2009.

Reading for a Living: How to Get Into Freelance Editing

Here are some suggestions that I’ve put together over the years for friends of friends who’ve asked how to get into freelance editing.

Get Ready

Before I became a freelance editor in 1998, I got ready:

After six months, I had enough freelance work that I gave up the part-time job and went freelance full-time. I also promised myself that I would quit freelancing after 12 months if I couldn’t meet my own goal of minimum annual income: the net pay that I’d received at the last full-time job.

What to Expect

As an editor, if you can specialize in math, law, or the sciences, anything other than the liberal arts, you can make a good living. In the liberal arts, you can make a decent living. Publishers — especially academic, legal, and medical publishers — are still in business despite the bad economy. And students will always need help with their papers and dissertations.

From 1998 to 2006, my clients for freelance work included publishing companies, government agencies, individuals, and high-tech companies. I did most of my work for them in Microsoft Word or plain text, sending files back and forth by email and occasionally shipping manuscripts by FedEx or UPS.

One thing I tell people about editing is that it’s solitary work. If being alone with your computer for six to nine hours a day doesn’t sound appealing, this may not be the line for you.

Do Your Research

Begin by looking at the Bay Area Editors’ Forum site and in particular at the definitions of kinds of editing. A developmental editor, for example, helps writers work out what they want to write and how they approach it. A copy editor (like me) works with what the author has already written and tightens up the prose, fixes punctuation, and makes queries about sections that may need rewriting. And there are other types of editors.

A good book to look at is Careers for Writers and Others Who Have a Way with Words, by Robert W. Bly. It has chapters on book publishing, newspaper work, advertising, and other fields, as well as a chapter on freelancing. Each chapter has a section of very good resources.

If you think you’d like to work at copyediting, I highly recommend a correspondence course offered through Editcetera: The ABCs of Copyediting. Teacher Amy Einsohn is careful and patient and has many years’ experience at both editing and teaching. I took this course after freelancing for several years and was amazed at how much I didn’t know. (Note to clients from before that time: I’m very sorry.) She’s also written a terrific book, The Copyeditor’s Handbook: A Guide for Book Publishing and Corporate Communications.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture Graduate School offers distance-learning courses in editing and other publishing duties, as well as in other fields.

You might also want to sign up as a subscriber to copyediting-L, a listserv for copy editors. It’s a very high-volume list (even digests come three and four times a day), so I look at it only on the Web. One fellow editor uses her email program’s message filters to save each day’s messages into a folder, to read later. (Did I mention that honing your computer skills in at least Microsoft Word and a good email program is essential? It is.) The copyediting-L list has thousands of subscribers around the world, and many are very generous with answers if you ask a question.

If you need a few more resources, just search on editing on your favorite search engine.

A great business resource is Working Solo, by Terri Lonier. I found it invaluable for figuring out all kinds of things, from whether to buy a fax machine to how to learn from more experienced people and give them something back. Another useful book is Small-Time Business Operator, by Bernard Kamaroff, CPA. A small business has quirky requirements, and these books can help you figure out how to think about them.

If you’re nervous about making the leap from a regular job to freelance work, you might like the exercises in the book Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway, by Susan Jeffers. The book was a great help to me.

Parting Thoughts

The freelance life can provide you with some freedom and a type of satisfaction that may be difficult to get anywhere else. When you do a freelance job well and get positive comments from clients, you can feel on top of the world. But when a freelance job does not turn out as well as you or, worse, the client had hoped, that is your signal to examine what went wrong and strive to do better on the next job.

I left freelance work in 2006 when this high-tech company offered me a full-time position as a technical editor. But it’s good to know that I will always have the possibility of freelance work if the company’s fortunes change or if I feel the need to do something different.

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Art Hoppe: A Few Good Things to Say About Cancer

The San Francisco Chronicle has been republishing material by beloved local columnists. Yesterday, they published this column, A Few Good Things to Say About Cancer, by Art Hoppe, written one month before his death from lung cancer in 2000.

Get Your Fresh Documentary Film at SnagFilms.com

At SnagFilms.com, you can choose from more than 550 documentary films to view. If you’d like to promote one of them, you can use a SnagFilms widget to host the film on your own web site, blog, or Facebook page.

The PDF media kit lists the SnagFilms executive team as Ted Leonsis, former vice chairman of AOL; Steve Case, former chair and CEO of AOL; and Rick Allen, former CEO of National Geographic Ventures and of Discovery.

The media kit conveniently asks: “What is SnagFilms’ business model?”

The answer: “SnagFilms pays out to the rights holders an equal share of advertising earned from streaming their film on the SnagFilms web site, via a SnagFilms virtual movie theater widget, or a SnagFilms distribution partner. Additional revenue for the rightsholder is earned from links to buy the DVD or pay to download.”

Among the current list of most discussed documentaries are Super Size Me, a journey into fast food; Paper Clips, about schoolchildren in Tennessee who collected six million paper clips as part of a project to understand the magnitude of the Holocaust; and In Debt We Trust, about the stranglehold of credit-card debt on U.S. consumers.

SnagFilms makes liberal use of banner ads and short ads that play before the feature you select. But perhaps access to these films makes the price of admission worthwhile.

Source

Allison Takeda and Jonathan Witherspoon, Parade Picks: Websites, Parade Magazine, April 5, 2009, p. 19.

SF Chronicle: Google Maps and Earth

Journalist Verne Kopytoff of the San Francisco Chronicle had two articles related to Google Maps and Earth in the March 30, 2009, issue.

In Google Carves Out Its Corner, Kopytoff looks closely at Google Maps and Earth and talks with John Hanke, formerly of satellite-mapping service Keyhole.

A related piece, Mappers Give Critical Eye to Aerial Images, discusses some of the issues that Google’s mapping team faces. What appears on your screen as a single satellite image is a compilation of many images taken at different times. And there are concerns about giving too much detail: “In some cases, Google is asked by government officials to blur aerial images of sensitive buildings … for security reasons.”