September 20th, 2012
ljdigital

cleofuckingpatra:

atavist:

I am a story enhancer. As a producer at The Atavist, my job is to take a story and enhance it using the overwhelming number of digital tools I have at my disposal. But just because it’s easy to throw an image, or a piece of video, or a map, or a musical snippet, or an interactive graphic at a story using the Atavist platform, doesn’t mean it will always improve the story. So I try to practice restraint when adding media to a story. Some results are better than others. But the biggest challenge I face is not related to producing a story, but explaining exactly what the finished product is

A lot of people have been asking me*:

What the heck is an “Enhanced E-Comic?”

Many people are familiar with the term “enhanced e-book,” but our new nonfiction comics work Stowaway is one of the world’s first “enhanced e-comics.” 

To be sure, comics have rapidly gone digital, and comics artists and fans were early adopters of the iPad platform, which has enabled some incredible works of comics art. A standout is Operation Ajax, a detailed history of the 1953 Iranian coup. It’s an elaborate production that exists somewhere between comics and animation in a space some people call “motion comics.” It comes with a haunting soundtrack and digital features too numerous to name, and you should definitely download it immediately. (It’s a story you can spend hours with—and it’s also a story that took a large staff several years to produce.)

Our enhanced e-comic, Stowaway includes a soundtrack and behind-the-scenes extras that illuminate the boundaries between journalism and art. The music, sound effects, and video animations elevate it beyond a print comics reading experience and the audio extras allow you to engage with the creators of the piece in a way that would be impossible in a print medium. In this way, Stowaway creates an embedded dialogue about the subjectivity of the comics form (which you could argue is no more subjective than written journalism).

So why not be a part of history, and experience the future of comics journalism?

Olivia Koski, Senior Producer

*No one has asked me this, actually. But they should.

Check out these fancy pants Atavist guys! So fun! Great work! 

Reblogged from Partons Vite
September 6th, 2012
ljdigital
thisistheverge:

Amazon: ‘We are pretty much done’ with the Kindle DX
Amazon rolled out a new line of Kindle Fire tablets and Kindle e-readers today, and unsurprisingly, the older members of the Kindle family have been pushed to the wayside. Amazon’s aging 9.7-inch e-reader, the Kindle DX, is one of the models being phased out, and the Kindle Touch and Kindle Touch 3G have apparently been replaced wholesale by the new Paperwhite models.

LJ Digital: New Kindle Fire New Kindle Fire New Kindle Fire New Kindle Fire. 

thisistheverge:

Amazon: ‘We are pretty much done’ with the Kindle DX

Amazon rolled out a new line of Kindle Fire tablets and Kindle e-readers today, and unsurprisingly, the older members of the Kindle family have been pushed to the wayside. Amazon’s aging 9.7-inch e-reader, the Kindle DX, is one of the models being phased out, and the Kindle Touch and Kindle Touch 3G have apparently been replaced wholesale by the new Paperwhite models.

LJ Digital: New Kindle Fire New Kindle Fire New Kindle Fire New Kindle Fire. 

Reblogged from The Verge
August 30th, 2012
ljdigital
thisistheverge:

Exclusive: meet the Amazon Kindle with ‘Paperwhite’ backlit display
Along with one or more new Kindle Fires, we’re expecting refreshed E Ink models in Amazon’s e-reader line at the company’s Los Angeles event next week as well. One of those appears to be a refreshed Kindle Touch — the button below the display is gone, and the bezel has changed from light to very dark gray. The overall shape of the product and the location of the USB port and power switch appear to be essentially unchanged. 

thisistheverge:

Exclusive: meet the Amazon Kindle with ‘Paperwhite’ backlit display

Along with one or more new Kindle Fires, we’re expecting refreshed E Ink models in Amazon’s e-reader line at the company’s Los Angeles event next week as well. One of those appears to be a refreshed Kindle Touch — the button below the display is gone, and the bezel has changed from light to very dark gray. The overall shape of the product and the location of the USB port and power switch appear to be essentially unchanged. 

Reblogged from The Verge
August 29th, 2012
ljdigital

Despite flaws, Rakuten is 1-0 against Amazon in Japan’s e-book wars

Rakuten, Japan’s largest online shopping mall — and a head-to-head rival of Amazon Japan that also hopes to expand its business globally — launched its first e-book reader, the Rakuten Kobo Touch, on July 19, getting the jump on the long anticipated Japanese release of Amazon’s Kindle. 

Read more…

August 23rd, 2012
ljdigital
Reblogged from ebookporn
August 9th, 2012
ljdigital

Coming this fall from the NYRB

A new e-book series devoted to publishing contemporary books of literary merit from around the world. 

       

Sign up for their newsletter to stay up to date on all of their release dates for these amazing stories from around the world. Can’t wait for fall! 

(all photos courtesy of NYRB website) 

August 9th, 2012
ljdigital

explore-blog:

Inquire, dubbed “the world’s first intelligent textbook,” answers biology questions by using an artificial intelligence reasoning system to help students understand relationships, not mere facts.

Reblogged from Explore
July 22nd, 2012
ljdigital

New York Magazine publishes first eBook! 

With the help of BylinerNew York Magazine has successfully published their first eBook, New York Magazine’s Most Popular. It is compilation of New York Magazine’s top 25 stories. Excellent writers such as Tom Wolfe, Gloria Steinem, Jimmy Breslin and Nora Ephron are featured on the debuted eBook so go buy it now! 

It is available for purchase for only $7.99 on iTunes, Barnes & Noble, and Amazon

(photo credit: courtesy of nymag.com

July 18th, 2012
ljdigital

eBooks are now the dominant single format of adult fiction

At the same time, net sales revenue from eBooks increased from  from $869 million in 2010 to $2.074 billion in 2011. That’s 15 percent of net revenues for publishers. AppNewser has more about how these numbers have affected the total US book market

Read more 

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A blog created by the Literary Journalism Department @ the University of California, Irvine, dedicated to discussions about non-fiction narratives in this ever-evolving era of E-books, E-readers, Blogs, Instapaper, The Atavist, Byliner, Amazon's Kindle Singles and all other new media outlets open to promoting great journalism. LJ Digital is managed by Asst. Prof. Erika Hayasaki and Cleo Tobbi, intern and UCI literary journalism student.

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