On Thu, Oct 16, 2008 at 12:01 PM, Nishant Shah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Ashish, unlike most academic authors, has a very keen interest in keeping
> his work Open Access and he has retained the rights for free digital
> dissemination of the entire book and is hoping to make it Public Access. The
> book will soon be available in a .pdf format for anybody to have a free
> download and read. In the process of thinking about the digital
> dissemination, we have now been having conversations about the form of an
> e-book - or in other words, if things published online are not books, then
> they should probably not follow the conventions of reading a book, and yet
> be able to make a sustained argument and information dissemination using a
> different form. Ashish is now suggesting that instead of treating the end
> result online as a book, he is more interested in looking at what form can
> the material he has (textual, visual, moving images, audio interviews) take
> so that it can be most effective online.
>
> For a scoping exercise, he is right now searching for 'interesting' forms of
> documentation online to see if an existing form appeals to him. I am, on his
> behalf, placing a request here... What are your favourite sites for digital
> documentation? Do you have any ideas on what form academic work or
> scholarship can take if it does not have to simulate the printed book? Have
> you come across (and hopefully saved) interesting spaces which you think
> helped the argument because of the form of the documentation and its design?
> We'd be quite grateful if we could get some links to start with and see if
> it might help in thinking about the form of online publishing that might be
> most conducive to online dissemination and reading.

I have some thoughts around this, but am in the middle of a conference
(in a break right now) so I'll just throw out this list of links for
now:

Thoughts about publishing and content:

http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/fosblog.html
http://playfullibrarian.blogspot.com/
http://thedigitalist.net/

Actual acts of commission:

http://craphound.com/content/
http://twobits.net/

Both Cory Doctorow and Chris Kelty are on silk. I hope they chime in
on this thread. Additionally, maybe Gautam has some thoughts to share.

The theme I'd suggest is to take advantage of the inherently
many-to-many nature of the medium to make the book a *conversation*
rather than a discourse.

http://www.cluetrain.com/

Apologies if this is a rehash.

Udhay
-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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