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Acronyms From XHTMLHELL

March 31, 2010 By Mark 2 Comments

For my own reference, as well as that of readers who are in the same boat, I pulled together the following links to help make sense of the alphabet soup inherent in self-publishing solutions. My objective is simply to provide a single post that will replace the repeated searches I’ve been running whenever I can’t remember how XML is different from HTML is different from XHTML.

  • Brian O’Leary, in a post titled Alphabet Soup, tackles the issue head on. If you get confused by XML, HTML and XHTML, this is the post for you.
  • In a post titled Web Standards for E-books, Joe Clark dives deeper. There’s a lot here and I’m not sure I understand or agree with all of it, but it definitely wrestles with the issues I’m wrestling with.
  • Gizmodo leads with a tabloid headline: Giz Explains: How You’re Gonna Get Screwed By Ebook Formats. Despite the hype the article is still worth a read, in large part because it projects all these tech issues onto the current marketplace. Again, I’m not sure I agree with the conclusions, but the article frames the right debates.
  • Jedisaber has an .epub eBooks Tutorial that I found extremely helpful. It includes a list of tools, with commentary about same, as well as many other useful bits of information. If you’re thinking of creating an ePub file, this is the place to start.

As suggested in a recent post, it’s always a good idea to look for work flow examples that you can copy or emulate. You may not agree with all of the other person’s choices, or need to follow their examples word for word, but anything is better than reinventing the wheel.

Where the rubber meets the road for me in all this jargon is getting my content distributed. I am concerned about embarking down a technological path that either dies out or takes my content hostage. I don’t want to have to keep changing native file formats, or create new documents for new services or sites that use proprietary tools as a means of also holding customers hostage. I’m interested in flexibility and utility and portability, and I’m constantly judging tech solutions by those criteria.

Update: Keith Fahlgren has a post about ePub and CSS that’s worth reading, if only to give you an idea of what’s coming in terms of compatibility issues. In the comments to the thread, Liz Castro says, “It’s browser wars all over again,” and I fear she may be right. My one hope is that the maturity and deep pockets of many of the market players will keep the insanity to a minimum.

— Mark Barrett

Filed Under: Publishing Tagged With: CSS, e-books, ePub, Publishing

Open-source .epub vs. Adobe .pdf

February 16, 2010 By Mark 10 Comments

Over the past few days I’ve been reading up on e-book file formats. I have a collection of short stories I want to publish, and I have a working understanding of the technology that readers will use to embrace that content, but until recently I haven’t worried too much about delivering content to that technology. (The main reason for my delay is simply the pace of change. Time spent trying to understand or master e-content technology six months ago would have put me at buggy-whip risk.)

As luck would have it, Mark Coker just released data about the file formats most in use on Smashwords, his e-publishing site. At the same time, Joel Friedlander pointed me to a useful video tutorial about formatting content using Adobe’s InDesign software, which seems to be the tool of choice for many people. From these two sources of information I was able to understand and easily navigate the first fork in the road on my own publishing journey.  [ Read more ]

Filed Under: Publishing Tagged With: ePub, Joel Friedlander, mark coker

Formatting Documents for e-Publishing

February 9, 2010 By Mark 7 Comments

I have a collection of short stories I would like to publish online. I’ve been working on cleaning them up for the past six months or so, and I’m now at the point where I need to confront a variety of technical questions. I know that a lot of people have already wrestled with these issues before me, so I’m asking for links/comments that will shorten my learning curve and prevent me from having to reinvent the wheel.

Questions:

  1. I write in Word, and that’s not going to change any time soon. My goal here is trying to develop a clean, clear work flow that makes the transition to any/all online publishing options as simple and painless as possible. (Including print-on-demand.) The first thing that (I think) I need to know is whether I should convert my original Word docs into another file format first (say, e-Pub, but that’s only an example), then change that internet-friendly file to meet the requirements of any particular publishing site/service, or whether I should only do so on a case-by case basis. What’s the right first step here?
  2. I need all the how-to links and advice I can get. I’m willing to read until my eyes bleed, but again, the goal is short-circuiting the learning curve. Who’s been down this road recently and written about it? Site-specific feedback is fine: I’d like to read about Smashwords author experiences, Amazon, etc.
  3. I know there are passionate views on both sides of the e-Pub file format issue. I’m not even sure what all the fuss is about, but I’m willing to learn. Who should I be reading? I like the idea of non-proprietary file formats. I know I’ll have to deal with Amazon’s proprietary format at some point, but I’m not eager to abet its dominance. Opinions? Links? Is this even worth wading into, or should I just stick with the practical issues related to getting my text ready?

Any and all feedback/links/comments appreciated.   [ Read more ]

Filed Under: Publishing Tagged With: ePub, format, formatting, Publishing