For those still ruminating on the latest reading gadget, a full review of Kindle with lots of closeup pics is at Appleinsider.
Recently in Tech Bits Category
So while the rest of us were reading, or something, a controversy erupted about the online social networking site Facebook. Facebook issued a new set of terms and conditions to its users, which, when read by a layperson (and apparently some lawyers), gives the impression that when you sign up with Facebook, the company owns all of your content in perpetuity, including your mother's love letters to her Italian lover, you diary you kept for a year when you were sixteen, your liver, your kidneys, and, in certain circumstances, belly button and all lint therein. After enormous outcry, Facebook relented and switched back its terms, and so at least for now, your kidneys are safe.

Facebook is enormously popular - it provides a place for people to "poke" each other, which is useful, and do other things that sound dirty but really aren't. Celebrities and politicians use it to promote their work. And I imagine more than a few writers are considering hooking in themselves. I mean, why not? I could put up a Facebook page, hook it over to my blog and vice versa, and maybe cast a wider net. There are writerly versions, of course - Redroom.com is one example - but Facebook is the Great Everybody, where you can run into that old high school classmate who just happens to be the head of a publishing house, or failing that, you can find that fellow from college who made cool sounds with his armpit.
I have decided to take a smaller leap, and jumped onto Twitter. Twitter (which is sometimes described as Twitterific) is an example of what is called "Microblogging". It's a status tool, allowing a person to post short phrases that answer the question, "What are you doing?". Users who have a Twitter account (free) can "follow" other users, which is less odd than "poking" but also more creepy. If you are a user you can follow me - including automated updates when something new is posted on Northern Word. The potential of this tool is more obvious once you have found a few people to follow. You can follow famous people or people you know, or just pick random people to follow. This is old news to Twitter aficionados - but a large percentage of the population is completely unaware that this sort of thing is going on. We'll see where it all goes.
Below: people who do not Twitter.
Elephant Seal at Ano Nuevo, California.

As a writer who is also a gadget freak, I've been watching the progression of ebook technology over the last few years with great interest. Sony and others jumped into the space, attempting to create an electronic device that, proponents argued, would eventually replace the paper book. The response from the reading public ranged from underwhelmed to unaware. If an ebook reader is launched on the market and nobody reads it, does it matter? Answer: Noooooooo.

All these years later, Amazon.com is desperate to launch an eBook reader that sticks. The stakes are high for the world's largest online bookseller; a business model similar to the lucrative iPod has a quite an allure. No shipping costs, for one. The possibility that consumers will make more impulse purchases when they can have their book right away, for two.
A couple of years ago Amazon launched the "Kindle", it's proposal to end the ebook argument once and for all. Amazon spent a lot of time with its supplier figuring out "electonic paper", to give a reading experience as simple and easy on the eyes as a real piece of paper. But the first generation Kindle looked ridiculous, like a block of Romano cheese sliced by a distracted teenager. It did not give off a "cool" vibe, it was black and white, it had technical limitations on how to get books and how many you could keep. The screen was black and white, which means the graphic design of many a book is generally lost on its Kindle copy. Oh, and it cost $350, which is, to be blunt, a deal breaker for most of the potential audience.
This last week, Amazon attempted to rectify some of this by launching the second generation Kindle. Reviews have been mixed (see Cnet's roundup for a variety of perspectives). Most acknowledge that the device has now entered into the general ballpark of "cool" - it's incredibly thin, and can now be slid neatly into a business portfolio. It hooks in, free of charge, to a 3G wireless network, allowing users to download books from almost anywhere near a city. It looks, at first glance, like a promising advance.
But-you knew there would be a very big "But" in an ebook discussion - it still costs $350. There are iPhones that cost less than that, even without a carrier subsidy. It is still only in black and white. So for me at least, Kindle will remain an interesting device I won't purchase. And it remains out of the price range that many students can afford, and still doesn't offer textbooks - textbooks are in my view the "killer app" that will propel the Kindle forward some day.
This iteration of the eBook has gotten closer to true "book replacement" functionality than we've been before. And that being the case, it's well past time to talk about what this means to publishing. Amazon has the potential to become, like Apple, a single, proprietary distribution point for an entire art form. Apple has only recently lifted its restrictions so that users can now play iTunes purchases on non-Apple products. The lifting of DRM (Digital Rights Management) lockdowns from iTunes is a major step forward in creating a market for music that is not firmly in the hands of one corporation and its interests. When everyone else does the same - and you can download music from a variety of "stores" to play on your iPod - the unlocking will be complete. Amazon's model is like iPod 1.0 - proprietary format, proprietary player, single point of purchase. Issues of censorship and corporate control of intellectual content will loom large if this platform manages to really take off before these restrictions are eased. Let's hope the Kindle eventually follows the same path as the iPod. Will Sony Reader owners one day be able to purchase books from Amazon? Will Barnes and Noble be able to sell an ebook for the Kindle?
These concerns all assume, of course, that the Kindle, or any ebook, will actually take off. With an estimated 500k units out there (and nobody really knows for sure) it seems like a small installed base - but keep in mind, selling 100,000 copies is a lot in the publishing world, and the purchasing habits of Kindle users are not known to us. Do they buy more than they did before the Kindle? If so, the impact may be already be greater than we realize. And then there's the dark horse in all this, the new "Shortcovers" app for mobile phones. Its impact may also be large, as the iPhone and others have spent more time on decent color screens - and a color screen is still something the Kindle lacks.
I'll keep my eye on the Kindle and let you know if any new developments crop up.
Below: begging raven from my recent trip to the Grand Canyon.

Update: This post has become a bit popular due to, as I say below, the lack of a clear set of brain-dead simple instructions for updating your MT banner. I will point out - as the Blog Herald did - there is now a plugin for this. As one of my commenters also pointed out, however, that plugin doesn't work for everybody. So for many folks who have just a simple blog, and aren't building the next Obama campaign web site (that was Movable Type, believe it or not) my instructions will probably still work best.
Ok, literary types and photography fans. I'm going to have to ask you to leave the room for a minute. This post is a public service to the poor souls who, like me, use Movable Type as their blog software, and who, like me, have found that relatively simple tasks can sometimes be nearly impossible to figure out due to the lack of a "for dummies" style guide to the software.
This blog uses software called Movable Type 4.23, which departs significantly from the Movable Type 3.x and prior versions on the simple issue of how to customize your banner (that pretty picture at the top of the page). Movable Type bloggers have torn their hair out over just how exactly to do this very simple task, because nobody seems to bother to write the relatively straightforward steps down for anyone to read. Or worse yet, the instructions provided are unnecessarily complex, advising the user how to make a banner that will cry out in the morning like a Turkish minaret and toast bread and wash clothes and then tuck the blogger into bed in the evening time. Most of us desire far less. Here, therefore, are the brain-dead simple instructions for those in need. Please note: this is only one way to do this. It is a simple way to do it. It has limitations. It only gets you so far. You may have to re-do this if you update your templates (this is less likely than I prevoiously thought, but still, fair warning). There is probably a way to avoid that. But it works to get up a simple banner image that is more than ugly default text. Movable Type Geniuses (who live on an island called Movable Land and wear fancy mumus) will surely scowl at the crude nature of these instructions. These people can kiss my ass. Click the link below for the full steps.
Continue reading Tech Bit: How to Change a Movable Type Banner.
Here at the Northern Word blog I was the victim of some kind of hacking attack this week, and the Wordpress version was completely wiped out. Apparently some people have not enough to do. So we're back to Movable Type, which is more cryptic to use but more secure. Hopefully I will be able to recover some of my previous content in the next few weeks. In the meantime, Northern Word will rebuild from this location.
Our usual content is lots of photography, travel essays, nature writing, literary comment, etc. Stay tuned. Estimated time of recovery: 2 weeks. And yes, the template WILL look more attractive when I'm done...
Amazon is gearing up an eBook initiative, including a $500 eBook reader and a proprietary content format. As we prepare to be underwhelmed, PC World has the first take. The idea of an eBook has always intrigued me, but years and years have gone by, and it's generally gone nowhere. Sony already has one of these literary gadgets, and a quick look at it here tells me it's not designed by someone who really loves books. It's a cold, grey, fragile-looking tablet. My dream for an ebook reader: waterproof, durable, opens and lays out like a book, color screen, 30 hours of battery life, backlit for evening reading without a light, notes capability, wi-fi access & internet browsing, ability to add notes to word docs for editing, and availability of every book in print via some sort of online store. An eBook Apple might have come up with.
Update: more on the Amazon launch here. Looks like Penguin is one of their big content providers; Penguin of course has Penguin Classics, which would include lots of material out of copyright. Given the digital rights management issues around music, likely to be similar or worse with books, it wouldn't surprise me if Amazon continued previous ebook efforts to emphasize a lot of non-copyright content.

Update: more on the Amazon launch here. Looks like Penguin is one of their big content providers; Penguin of course has Penguin Classics, which would include lots of material out of copyright. Given the digital rights management issues around music, likely to be similar or worse with books, it wouldn't surprise me if Amazon continued previous ebook efforts to emphasize a lot of non-copyright content.

Welcome to Northern Word, the online home of writer Susan McNerney. Northern Word features lots of photography, words on the business and process of writing, original bits of fiction and nonfiction, travelogues and travel writing, and anything else that Susan feels like posting. Browse the categories on the left (or the topic cloud below) to see previous episodes, and don't miss the two big travelogues: A Week in Rome and A Great Southwest Road Trip. Susan is originally from the redwood regions of Northern California, but now lives and writes in chilly Minnesota.
New! Follow Susan on Twitter and get notified of updates to Northern Word, as well as other curious things.
All images on Northern Word are under copyright (see Creative Commons license linked below). Want to use one of these pics? Feel free to drop me an email at mackerelstreet ((at )) gmail (( dot ) com.












