A Christmas Lesson for Publishers

Posted on December 19, 2009

 
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Santa Claus

Santa Claus

One February night in 1938 Philip Van Doren Stern had a dream. The 38 year-old published historian also had a deep interest in fantasy and the macabre. As with most dreams his morning recollections were vague and conflicting. It had something to do with a man who had never been born, or wished he had never been born.

Stern decided to write down his recollections. A narrative began to take shape and with later revisions became a short story he titled The Greatest Gift. It was a simple celebration of things taken for granted. Read more…

Content is King (Like Cotton)

Posted on December 12, 2009

 
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Phil Leigh

Phil Leigh

Comcast bought NBC to gain control over content distributed by its CATV system. Time-Warner advocates that popular TV shows be made available on the Internet only to consumers already subscribing to conventional Cable and Satellite networks. Prominent publishers require that new book releases be hard-cover-only thereby delaying ebook versions by four months. Such actions reflect the spurious notion that “Content is King”. Unfortunately it’ll prove to be about as effective as King Cotton diplomacy was for the Confederacy. Read more…

Cable Operators Will Abandon TV

Posted on December 5, 2009

 
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Phil Leigh

Phil Leigh

If you would like to learn what will motivate the CATV and Telco industries to abandon traditional video services in favor of a video-centric Internet, this audio podcast is for you.

Since the release of our February ’09 Third Generation Television research report, we repeatedly emphasized that the future of television is Internet Video, period. Ultimately, the advantages to consumers, sponsors, content providers, and even network operators are simply too compelling. Read more…

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