Monday, January 27, 2014

3

In Print On Damand, Ludovico talks about how Philip M. Parker discovered a unique approach to POD. Parker designed a software for collecting freely available information and compiling the results into books which can then be printed using POD. Each book is then readily accessed through the internet. Parker states that "My goal isn't to have the computer write sentences, but to do the repetitive tasks that are too costly to do otherwise." This means that each book breaks even as soon as the first copy is sold because there is no investment to be recovered. This new software makes it simpler to alter the content of a publication at any point during the production process. "The POD process actually makes it possible to continuously update the content—thus bringing a defining aspect of online publishing back to the printed medium." I think this is a great way to bring people together if the author and publisher open editing up to the community. People can work together to help update or add content and fix errors. However, this makes me think if Wikipedia where anyone can add or update the content on the page. You have to be careful then what you read on these typed of sites. I believe they have a way of screening the content before it stays too long or is published on the site. This is something that POD would have to consider.

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Complementary

In the chapter "The Death of Paper (which never happened)" of the book Post-Digital Print by Alessandro Ludovico, the sentence that stood out to me the most was "paper and pixel seem to have become complementary to each other." I never thought about it like that, but today printed material is created by using pixels on a screen. Without a pixel (for the most part) you would not be able to print anything. Nowadays they're also trying to make pixels on a screen seem as real as what you see on printed material or in mother nature. Retina and HD display is about as close as they've come thus far to the reality of an image on a screen. Now 3D screen display comes to mind. I wonder if they'll ever be able to have a 3D display where you would not need to wear special glasses for? Or have it be so real that when you reached out to touch the 3D object it would have substance. You would actually be able touch it or at least the perceived sensation of touching it would come upon your hand. I wonder?...

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

"In Defense of the Book" and Holy Bible.


In "In Defense of the Book" Gass expresses that the materiality of the book cannot be reproduced on a screen. Books are a “raw material of facts and thoughts, wood.” They can be reseen, reread, and argued in their margins, unlike words on a screen that can only be remade and relight. I definitely agree with this notion. Like him, I agree that books are not only a history of words, but also a history of travel. Whether it’s a book from a library that has been held by many or a book that is intimately owned by an individual. It will eventually show signs of use and wear. A book will age like us human do. It will be a much slower and prolonged process, but eventually the pages will begin to yellow and curl. The spine will loosen and disintegrate through being opened so many times (or not if it was a rarely used book). The new book smell will spoil or possibly pick up odors it was surrounded by. Also, there is something about collecting the books you’ve read and displaying them on a shelf as your own little library. It shows the history of the books you have read for others to see. People can browse through your collection, comment on a book or even ask to borrow it. You cannot get this sort of interaction with electronic books unless you have an open electronic list on display of the books you’ve read. Or maybe one-day people will have a designated screen for books that would be displayed for browsing like how Netflix, for example, displays their movies.
This leads me to my possession of my Grandmother’s Holy Bible. Almost immediately after receiving this assignment on Monday her bible popped into my head to write about. Twenty-four hours later after receiving this assignment I found out that her 90th birthday was Monday. Her bible would be about 75 years old now. After my Grandmother passed away my Mother kept it in a draw in our living room. I remember playing with it when I was younger. I would hold it open in my hand and dance and sing as Bell did in the beginning of The Beauty and the Beast movie. Now, that it is in my possession it sits on the shelf of my bedroom desk. I read it occasionally, but since it is an older version of the bible some of the language used is more difficult to understand. As I carefully turn the pages its scent travels to my nose. It smells of her. It smells of my Grandparents’ house. It smells of my Grandparent’s kitchen closet where the green box of crayons and large old fashion roll of paper was kept.