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Tuesday, January 21, 2003Print-on-Demand GuideI'm not familiar with this guide, but the press release makes me think it's targeted to authors/small publishers seeking digital print services for books. I think it is a collection of pay-for-inclusion profiles of digital print service providers.NOTE: The term "print-on-demand" is broad, generic, and used to denote almost any form of digital print. By itself, the term has become almost useless as a descriptor of any particular service. I prefer the term digital print for describing the print technology, and demand-driven to describe a zero-inventory, post-sale manufacturing service.
Print-on-Demand Guide updated for the new year!. The premiere reference guide "A Basic Guide to Fee Based Print on Demand Publishing Services" has just been revised for the New Year. [PRWEB Jan 21, 2003] Sunday, January 19, 2003Demand-driven PrintCafePress announces entry into demand-driven publishing arena; if you publish, print, distribute, or sell books you better pay attention. This will affect you. Not that CafePress will be a major book publishing player, but it represents another step toward general acceptance of the demand-driven model, and another opportunity to hone the process.What separates CafePress from all the other Internet-based demand-driven publishers (Xlibris, iUniverse, 1stBooks, BookSurge, etc.) is their focus on the general promotional market. They sell promotional items. And books, CDs, DVDs, etc. are great promo items in media- and knowledge-based markets. I'm curious to learn just who will manage the production for CafePress, as there are only a handful of companies in the US who can actually manufacture on demand (as opposed to short-run or micro-inventory) for a reasonable price. And none of them are on the west coast. (But given CafePress is in San Leandro, I can hazard a guess...)
CafePress to do books. CafePress is branching out into print-on-demand books, CDs and DVDs. Printing the Web"Consider how extraordinary paper is: lightweight and flexible, it supports thousands of typefaces, as well as black-and-white and color illustrations, and its high-resolution and high contrast facilitates reading." -- and so begins an excellent Boxes and Arrows article on one of the most important topics in publishing.Print isn't going away -- not in our lifetime, if ever. But we are only beginning to grasp the importance of integrating the physical and digital forms of information, or understand how to do so. This article opens with some good background and references supporting this concept, then moves on to more practical aspects of the problems and current solutions for integrating the web and print -- in particular, the use of CSS and XSL-FO to avoid maintaining separate versions of data. Well-written and with excellent resources, this article is well worth reading. Thanks to James Robertson at Column Two: Printing the web. James Kalbach talks about designing websites that can be printed, either by making the one page work on paper, or by providing an alternate "printable version". Sounds pretty mundane, but there's a lot of good tips in this article. [Column Two] Saturday, January 18, 2003GraphicBrain.com Vertical Search EngineInteresting idea -- a vertical industry search engine for the graphic arts. There may be similar tools in other industries but this is the first I've come across.I couldn't find a complete list of sources anywhere on the site, and a couple of quick query results showed a lot of repetition within relatively few sources. But the service does have some nice features, including the ability to save queries, define agents to update queries, sort results, and specify types of content for constraining the search. Registration is required for full access. I didn't see any mention of fees for registering to use the search engine. I'd be more skeptical (downright cynical, actually) if this were an American venture, but it's run by VIGC, a private initiative backed by the Flemish government and the European Regional Development Fund. VIGC has about a dozen Euro graphic arts mfgs as members, but appears to be mostly trying to sell consulting services.
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This Page was last updated: Wed, 02 Jul 2008 22:06:57 GMT
License: Unless otherwise expressly stated all original material, of whatever nature, created by Terry W. Frazier and included in this website, its related pages and archives, is licensed under a Creative Commons License, some rights reserved.
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