Resource:Liquid Publications: Scientific Publications meet the Web - NeuroLex. Should we move to Liquid Publishing and post publication open review? Both the concepts are nice with its own pros and cons.
As discussed earlier its credibility and review response will be questionable points. But weren't these the same issues which were dealt by Wiki in their initial days? When I heard about Wiki in the early 2000s, I thought "if anybody could write anything, how can all of it be true"? But now almost the whole world approaches it to know the basics. Today the scene is different in the case of publishing one's research. Agree with you Sir, but still we needs lots of improvement and moderation to create this new Era.I will surely love to have that type of publications.I' glad that you proposed this for the ease of editors/publishers and even for the researchers. An open review doesn't mean that anybody can review that, it only means that the reviewer and what he has said will be visibile to the users. What's new in PDF 2.0 regarding digital signatures.
PDF 2.0: is it all it's cracked up to be? A lifetime ago Adobe PDF, the heart of pretty much all digital printing and publishing workflows, came onto the market.
After very many years and much delay, version 2.0 will soon be ready for publication. What can we expect, and how will it affect our sector? How should you prepare to implement it, if at all? A technology that was way ahead of its time in 1993, PDF reflected its inventors' vision at a point when the graphic arts industry was still wrestling with PostScript. John Warnock, co-founder of Adobe, did not develop PDF with printers and publishers in mind; he was, instead, trying to create an electronic equivalent to paper documents. Even though PDF wasn't intended for applications in our sector, the graphic arts industry loved it. Liquid Knowledge? Knowledge flows. (Heraclitus) of Ephesus wrote, “No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it’s not the same river and he’s not the same man.
Everything flows and nothing abides. Even sleepers are workers and collaborators on what goes on in the universe. If we do not exepect the unexpected, we will never find it.” He was ahead of his time. Ten Commandments of Content Management. From Chaos to Control. It's always been easy to build a Web site.
But it's never been easy to build one that really works. The challenges are daunting: You need to give your audience engaging, accurate, and up-to-date information. You need to manage the production process to allow for rapid changes—without forgoing quality control or overwhelming the people who maintain the site. You may even need an enterprise-wide strategy for distributing corporate information to multiple delivery channels. For Doug Smith, director of Internet technologies for Novant Health, a nonprofit health-care system in North Carolina, an enterprise content management system (CMS) was the key to tackling these challenges.
LMS and LCMS. Many organizations looking to add more e-learning elements to their company training programs get stuck choosing between two similar-sounding, but ultimately different, systems: Learning Management Systems (LMS) and Learning Content Management Systems (LCMS).
There are a number of similarities between the two, and recently many software packages have blurred the differences between them. However, there are a few key differences that organizations should keep in mind when looking for an online training system. Was ist eigentlich “liquid content”? Liquid Storytelling: Geschichten im Content Marketing. Reklame war gestern.
Eine reine Produktbeschreibung und Aneinanderreihung von Fakten ist langweilig geworden und reizt potentielle Kunden nicht mehr, sich für die angepriesene Ware zu entscheiden. Liquid Content. Transmediale Rabbit Holes: Liquid Content. Die Zukunft der Medien ist multiperspektivisch und semi-real.
Geschichten von Helden, Schurken und Welten werden in Zukunft nicht mehr von einem Autor in einem Ursprungsmedium erzählt und dann in den anderen wiederholt, sondern simultan von vielen in allen Formaten weitererzählt. Transmediales Erzählen revolutioniert die Unterhaltungsbranche mit seinen „Rabbit Holes“ Jeder weiß, wer Batman ist. Der geheimnisvolle Superheld heißt in Wirklichkeit Bruce Wayne und ist ein wohlhabender Geschäftsmann in der fiktiven amerikanischen Stadt Gotham City.
Wer Batman ist, ist völlig unstrittig. Sehr viel schwieriger zu sagen ist hingegen, was Batman ist. Blondé - Whitepaper: The case for mastering liquid content. 3 Content Marketing Ideas You Should Steal from Coca Cola. Coca Cola's Liquid and Linked Content. Coca-Cola’s “North Star” is “Liquid” Content Developed through Co-Creation - Enveritas Group. Coca-Cola’s “North Star” is “Liquid” Content Developed through Co-Creation March 9, 2012 Joey Hall No Comments » Tags: Brand Marketing, Content, content marketing, SES NYC 2012 Continued from Storytelling Means Earning Your Share of Popular Culture The second video in the Coca-Cola 2020 Content series takes the idea of what Coca-Cola calls its “North Star,” the creation of “liquid” ideas aimed at increasing the company’s presence in popular culture and discusses the processes that will lead the company to this North Star.
Part two begins by recapping the Coca-Cola definition of content—“the creation of stories that are to be expressed through every possible connection.” For the company, this means that each story needs to add real value and significance to the end consumer. Coca-Cola is striving to make this happen by the co-creation of stories with consumers, agencies, creatives and others. Aubrae Wagner VP Brand Marketing. Social Media Case Study: Coke’s Content Plan To Dominate Popular Culture by 2020. By Tod Maffin, Publisher, CaseStudiesOnline.com Recently, Coke was so bold, they shared their marketing plan with the world on how they will own a disproportionate share of the conversations of popular culture by the year 2020.
The mastermind behind this new direction is Jonathan Mildenhall, VP Global Advertising Strategy and Creative Excellence at Coca-Cola. The videos below are a profound look into the future of digital marketing. It will not be about the creative twist or angle or brilliant call to action to move you to buy a product. Soon, to succeed companies must think like inventors willing to invest in the cost of generating great content (blog posts, white papers, eBooks, videos, marketing campaigns). Key Takeaways.