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Showing posts with label Blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blog. Show all posts

Monday, July 16, 2012

Bref, je publie en fou, partout.

Allo fidèles lectrices (toujours voulu ça, un p'tit plaisir interdit juste à moi ;-)
Je ne suis pas désolé d'avoir oublié ce blog pendant 7 semaines,
comme les 7 vies du chat qui est mort 2 fois.
Une par la charrue un matin de tempête,
l'autre par la porte, épaisse et lourde, swingnée trop fort.
Bon,
Où en étais-je.
Oui, je ne suis pas désolé.  Parce que je publie du contenu partout... ailleurs.
Là je suis désolé.  De ne pas vous l'avoir dit.
"Désolé"
Ok ?
Il faut me lire sur mon site d'entreprise : http://sebastienbarrette.com/fr/blogue
Il y a aussi le côté "anglais" que vous affectionnez tant, sans retenue mais avec une fausse gène quand un Pkist vous attrape : http://sebastienbarrette.com/en/blogue
bref, c'est un peu platte.
En plus j'essaie de maintenir www.textestapas.com au goût changeant du jour.  Je travaille sur un texte à propos de l'enlisement de mon paternel, ça promet.
J'ai deux compte twitter : @gestionbarrette et @peste_I
Quoique le 2e c'est VIP, privé, pour ceux qui veulent et que je veux qui me voient déconner.  Je ponctue la vie monotone de toutes ces choses que d'autres pensent tout bas en les écrivant tout haut, ou presque.
Oui,
Il fallait aussi que je laisse dormir un peu ce blog pour que mon site d'entreprise soit indexé avant celui-ci.
Avouez que c'est bizarre un peu quand on recherche un professionnel de tomber sur "Masturbation... " Ça brasse en dedans du comptable propret en vestion, il a déjà une petite tension... avant de lire "... Intellectuelle".
Zouf, tension partie.
post terminé.
pause terminée.
;-)

Saturday, February 05, 2011

Dominic Thuot


Dominic Thuot
I don't know how many pictures he takes, how many hours he spends working on them, ... how many he takes... but I know that he uses a Canon; a very good start ;-)  For the other details, I'll take time when he comes back to chat, for a while, with him.

I know I like what he displays on his blog.  I like how it is framed, the depth of field, the subjects, the color; so crisp, so bright !  And for those of you who tried it... taking shots of people at night making sure you get all the ambient light, the smoke blown while preserving sharpness... could be quite challenging.

He cannot claim to be an amateur anymore.

You'll find the site he updates while he runs through the world with Eli : dominiquethuot.com





Sunday, January 09, 2011

Domino Project

The Domino Project


Received this from a friend.  The concept is amazing though there are others around (lulu, Ardith).  If we can really find a way to directly connect the author and the reader for the time required to read a book, eternity compared to blog and web surfing... we will have move forward.  On top of that, if we can pay the author directly for the quality of content produced, then we leap forward.  
... promising !



Book publishing is changing. It’s changing faster than it has in a hundred years. I’ve been persistent enough to be part of that change, provoking and poking and wondering about what comes next.

Today, I’m thrilled to report on what’s next for me.
  • To reinvent the way books are created when the middleman is made less important.
  • To reinvent the way books are purchased when the tribe is known and embraced.
  • To reinvent the way books are read when the alternatives are so much easier to find.
  • To find and leverage great ideas and great authors, bringing them to readers who need them.
The notion of the paper book as merely a package for information is slowly becoming obsolete. There must be other reasons on offer, or smart people will go digital, or read something free. The book is still an ideal tool for the hand-to-hand spreading of important ideas, though. The point of the book is to be spread, to act as a manifesto, to get in sync with others, to give and to get and to hand around.

Our goal is to offer ideas that people need and want to spread, to enjoy and to hold and to own, and to change conversations.
Working with a great team at Amazon, I’m launching a new publishing venture called The Domino Project. I think it fundamentally changes many of the rules of publishing trade non-fiction.
Trade publishing (as opposed to textbooks or other non-consumer ventures) has always been about getting masses of people to know about, understand and read your books. The business has been driven by several foundational principles:

1. The middleman (the bookstore) has a great deal of power. There’s only a limited amount of shelf space, and there are more books (far more books) than we have room for. No display, no sale. That’s one reason books are published with the economically ridiculous model of 100% returns from bookstores. Huge stores can carry thousands of books and return them if they don’t sell. Large chains get a say about what’s on the cover, what the title is, and they even get paid for shelf displays.

2. The audience (the reader) is largely unknown to the publisher, and thus to the author. Authors with large followings still have to start over with each book, because they don’t have permission (or the data) to contact loyal readers directly.

3. Pricing and product are static and slow. Once a book is published, the price is set forever. Add to that the glacial speed from conception to publication date and you see a system that is set up to benefit neither the publisher nor the reader.

4. Books are inherently difficult to spread. The ideas in books might travel, but the act of recommending a book, having the idea stick and a new sale get made is slow or broken. Given how important the ideas in books are, this chain has many weak links. It's worth rethinking how a publishing house could organize around its ultimate goal, which is to spread ideas.

The internet and the Kindle are changing all of these rules. The Domino Project is designed to (at least by way of example) remap many of these foundations.

1. There is no middleman. Because there is infinite shelf space, the publisher has more control over what the reader sees and how. In addition, the Amazon platform allows a tiny organization to have huge reach without taking significant inventory risk. "Powered by Amazon” is part of our name—it describes the unique nature of the venture... I get to figure out the next neat idea, and Amazon can handle printing, logistics and the platform for connection.

2. The reader is tightly connected with the publisher and the author. If you like the sort of things I write or recommend, you can sign up here (for free, using your email) and we can alert you to new works, send you free samples and otherwise make it easy for you to be smart about the new ideas that are generated. (RSS works too).

3. Pricing can vary based on volume, on timing, on format. With this project, I’ve made the decision to ignore the rules that publishers follow to get on the New York Times bestseller list. There’s no point in compromising the consumer experience or the product merely to get a nice ego boost and a small shot of promotion. More on this in a future post, but I'll let you use your imagination.

4. Digital goods and manifestos in book form make it easier to spread complex ideas. It’s long frustrated me that a blog post can reach 100 times as many people as a book, but can’t deliver the nuance a book can. The Domino Project is organized around a fundamentally different model of virality, one that allows authors to directly reach people who can use the ideas we’re writing about.

The Domino Project is named for the domino effect—ideas can quickly spread, moving through a previously static set up. Our mission isn’t to become a promotional machine, focused on interrupting large numbers of people or having significant promotional chops through traditional media. Instead, we're grabbing the opportunity to choose and deliver manifestos that are optimized for the tribe, for the small group that wants to grab them, inhale them and spread them. The good ones will spread, first from person to person, then from one circle to another, and eventually into large groups.
That’s a lot to absorb for one post. I’ve been working on the ideas behind The Domino Project since I published my very first book in 1986. The first manifestos won’t be out for a few months, but you can learn more as we go by following the Domino Project blog here.
PS When we roll out our books, there will be sneak previews and other goodies for those first on the list...

Thanks Céline.

Friday, October 01, 2010

MyModernMet // MyModernMix

Stumbled upon two fun exchange website, networking zone.

Have you noticed where Alice's blog is hosted ?  In my previous post you will see it comes from "MyModernMet".  I dug and found this place where you can host your blog (like Blogger :-).




This is how thew briefly present themselves :
My Modern Metropolis is where art enthusiasts and trendspotters connect over creative ideas.

And the "sister site" that I perceived as being design driven:


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They are both filled with awesome material, worth to surf for a while.

Thursday, May 07, 2009

LEGOFESTO



Un trippeux de LEGO qui s'exprime sur la guerre et la violence policière.

LEGOFESTO

Cool

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

coyote des neiges

coyote des neiges

Un blog qui m'a bien fait rire ce matin !
Son escapade Pascale est excellente aussi ;-)