Comment on Chime.in with yours truly.
Writer, Agilist, Elder Geek
This was going to be a different post, but I decided to focus on Amazon's publishing deals with authors – sans publishers.
I'm still chewing it over, but one thing struck me about this deal.
Let's take a look at what's changed over the years with technology and publishing:
Now all of those things were remarkable separately. Bring them together and is it any surprise that Amazon could offer authors a sweet deal – and that anyone else could take the above innovtions and do something similar?
No surprise. None. This is something some of us saw coming (I'd like to think we kinda did here, though I didn't expect Amazon to leapfrog like this). I'm actually disappointed the many publishers out there didn't see this coming and make some kind of pre-emptive run – disappointed, but not surprised.
So a bunch of us progeeks saw it coming at whole or in part. Fine. No surprise.
So what are we missing?
What are we missing in gaming? Gaming's had a lot of changes, we're in the age of DLC and indie games which surprised a few people – so what is going on with all the innovations we've missed?
What's missing in comics? It's easy to be overwhelmed with the films or the multimedia out there, but a lot of changes in publishing affects comics. So what are we missing?
What are we missing in technology? Hell, we know the answer to that – EVERYTHING.
In this incredible age of technology and media, we're missing things because we miss how things combine. Easy to develop game engines and tools combine with easy DLC to change gaming. Freelance sites let future writers find editors cheap, thus going around the limits of a publisher.
Change seems to sneak up on us because we miss how things come together. If you want to start predicting the future with any kind of accuracy, start asking how things come together.
Let me close with a little game I find helps – pick any two pieces of technology, social change, etc. Ask what happens when they combine. Then pick another area of change and combine it with one of those elements – or both of them.
Go on, give it a whirl . . .
Say goodbye to IPOs, hello to a new social network, and a big wet kiss for a new publishing opportunity! It's geek news time!
Economics/Geekonomics:
A gander at the level of debt of different countries, just to help keep things in perspective.
Those big IPOs? Probably gone for good.
Film:
There is probably a 4th Transformers film. Er. Yeah. Well they did make money.
Publishing:
Amazon signs authors directly. This is pretty big because it cuts out publishers (who have their own problems), gives the authors what is likely a bigger cut (which is nice), and promotes Amazon's services. This is likely a very big shift for Amazon, and may well mean they broaden their unique content offerings. Meanwhile, just what are publishers going to do . . .
Social Media:
Meet the Facebook/Twitter/Digg/etc. competitor Chime.in. Not much to say about it, but we'll see how it does – may be worth exploring for now.
Technology:
Big new for YouTube – pairing videos with a merch store for musicians. Sounds good – potentially profitable, and it transforms Youtube into something more. Probably a good move on Amazon's part – now a question here is how far this extends to smaller names and independents . . . since if anyone can eventually get into this it could be big.
RIM apologizes to its remaining customers with $100 of free apps.
Video Games:
Professor Layton no longer exclusive, gets new iOS game. This is big as this is a well-loved (and deservedly so) franchise mixing puzzles and enchanting characters. Of course this brings up the question of who else is waiting to make the leap – and if this is the breach in the damn.
QUESTION OF THE DAY: How do you think publishers will react to Amazon's new deals?