Malish
Well-Known Member
please give Richard chance to respond (he is probably trying to extract some details from other departments)
Thanks
Thanks
Stop splitting hairs, the concept of data format and delivery mechanism are intimiately linked.Acrobat is not a delivery mechanism. It's a file format, and a bloody good one at that, for this sort of thing
Perhaps. But there is no reason why they cannot use pdf files. The lack of colour is a bit of a problem for something like a yachting magazine, but that's independent of file format.
What the industry wants it to provide a crippled, locked-down, DRMed version of content, up at which more users will rightly stick two fingers.
I disagree. Files are files are files.Stop splitting hairs, the concept of data format and delivery mechanism are intimiately linked.
PDF is not a good format/mechanism for content that is targetted at a wide range of devices because too much of the formatting is determined at source.
The whole point is that the delivery mechanism has to encompass everything and take account of the manner in which the recipients will be accessing the content - that certainly includes the device on which it will be read.Ah, now you're talking about devices, not delivery mechanism. Which takes us into a completely new series of issues.
To send out a digital copy of a magazine, pdf is absolutely fine. There's a fair chance that it's sent to the printers as a pdf anyway (been there, done that, got the oil skins) and producing a pdf for on-screen reading is a trivial modification. In my case, I tick one box which caps graphics resilution at 72dpi and untick the one which includes all the pre-press stuff round the edges and bob's yer uncle.
Now, if you want a completely different version of PBO or YM or whatever which is readable on a mobile phone, or on a greyscale device like a kindle, that's a completely different problem. Though, once you've reformatted it appropriately, there is still no reason why you can't send it around as a pdf.
Let's remember, too, that e-readers are in their infancy, unusual and not very good. My interest - and I suspect the overwhelming majority of readers' interest - in getting electronic versions of publications is to read them on a computer (desktop, laptop or netbook) screen and for all of these pdf is by far the best option.
There are many better formats for delivery to a variety of devices - for example "HTML" or "EPUB" are both formats that allow the rendering device to take more decisions about customising the presentation to the user than PDF does.
But that is the whole point - digital delivery ought to be very different from just reproducing the paper magazine electronically. Very few people, if any, view a pdf file on a machine for which it is an appropriate format - at best they are viewing portrait content on a widescreen monitor and more usually they can't see the whole page at once, so any article printed in columns is frustrating to read.I take your point. However, if I'm shelling out for a professional produced magazine in e-format, I'm paying in part for professional, readable design. I don't necessarily want my device to reset the content.
But that is the whole point - digital delivery ought to be very different from just reproducing the paper magazine electronically. Very few people, if any, view a pdf file on a machine for which it is an appropriate format - at best they are viewing portrait content on a widescreen monitor and more usually they can't see the whole page at once, so any article printed in columns is frustrating to read.
Digital delivery should be about bite-size pieces of content provided regularly throughout the term - with searchable access to archives.
That is the way magazines will have to evolve - although it may take another 5 years before it becomes common place.
But that is the whole point - digital delivery ought to be very different from just reproducing the paper magazine electronically. Very few people, if any, view a pdf file on a machine for which it is an appropriate format - at best they are viewing portrait content on a widescreen monitor and more usually they can't see the whole page at once, so any article printed in columns is frustrating to read.
Digital delivery should be about bite-size pieces of content provided regularly throughout the term - with searchable access to archives.
That is the way magazines will have to evolve - although it may take another 5 years before it becomes common place.
you are barking up the wrong tree. You simply can't provide the same content on a large screen and on a phone. No editing on this planet provides that, human or automatic.
That's exactly what I'm saying Brendan - the client end needs to be able to modify the content (or get it modified server-side) so it is suitable for the device it's being displayed on..
I don't advocate reformatting. I do read the odd thread on a normal phone. If you can call most phones these days normal. Not what I'd call a smartphone though.As a matter of serious interest, how many of those advocating reformatted stuff are reading these forums on a smartphone?
That is what is going to happen - although it may take 5 years or more before it becomes common. Magazine publishers will continue to provide content but that content will be distributed in different ways, and potentially paid for in different ways.That's not so much magazines evolving and magazines ceasing to exist. Which may well happen, of course. For the moment, though, I think a lot of people would be happy with a straightforward digital copy of the printed magazine, and that is what IPC offer, albeit in a pain-in-the-arse format.
I regularly read these forums on a smart phone. Reading is fine although it could be made a little better with less white space all over the place. Replying is slow due to the usual problems with typing on a phone (even though mine does have a keyboard).As a matter of serious interest, how many of those advocating reformatted stuff are reading these forums on a smartphone?
What I would say about the cost of our digital subscriptions to our boating magazines is that we've frozen the price point at £29.99 for last 24 months, which is now on average 15% cheaper than our best print subscription offer.