Full Motion Video and Websites Inside Print Magazines
Full Motion Video and Websites Inside Print Magazines
”[Making transistors out of plastic rather than silicon] could greatly expand the range of objects that connect to
the Internet, because electronic connections would be handled by a thin film or moldable material, rather than rigid
chips. A thin screen could be bound into a magazine, for instance, and connect wirelessly to a Web site.”
More than a few futurists have predicted the emergence of flexable computer screens and even entire computers that
could be rolled up or folded and stuck in a pocket. With print advertising and the competition between traditional
print and digital news delivery the way they are, why wouldn’t this technology first reach the consumer market in the
vehicle of a print periodical?
God save the magazine industry if advertisers push Quark-based layout artists to begin building motion graphics in
After Effects.
Table of contents for Publishing
- The future warehouse of unwanted books
- Quantity Over Quality at Google Book Search
- First time a blog becomes a magazine: AlwaysOn quarterly coming this winter
- Designers Are the New Editors
- etoy.SHARE issues July 2006
- Limited Edition Cinema Redux Poster.
- Journalism Through Computer Programming
- The book of the future
- Text casting
- Digital newspapers
- One-off books
- Socially Publishing, Bookmarking, Archiving, Annotating Searching the Web
- Derivative works and affects on book sales
- Full Motion Video and Websites Inside Print Magazines
- Boingboing.net linking to Technorati on every post.
- web citation index
- Yellowing pages offer a glimpse of phone history
- Kindle Fundamentals
- Did someone say participate? - an atlas of spatial practice
- Google Does Shakespeare - Google Earth Files Available
- Two classic books online
- From blgos to books
- Google Scholar
- 20000 books by color
- Delicious Library
- Print and Electronic Text Convergence
- *.txt
- The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci
- Clip/Stamp/Fold