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APE, or How to publish a book

2013 February 10
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More about APE: Author, Publisher, EntrepreneurNot sure anymore how I came across this book –before it was published- but I did preview (pre-read) How to publish a book by Guy Kawasaki. For some reason, I never forwarded my comments back in time, so in the age of the thank-you economy, this is payback time. Just in case you don’t know him: Guy is an author and former evangelist at Apple. I first heard about Guy when he published “Engagement Enchantment”, but oddly enough never read the book (put it on my Anobii wishlist for now).

APE (which stands for Author, Publisher, Entrepreneur, the three roles a self-publisher must fill) covers the main parts of this book on how to be an Author, Publisher and Entrepreneur. It is a book for the author publisher entrepreneur in all of us. Kawasaki addresses straight forward topics like:  How to write your book (…), How to build an enchanting personal brand, How to guerrilla market your book, but also some –very- practical topics like How to Convert Your File, How to Upload Your Book. And it includes tips like: Don’t stick your face exactly in the middle of the photo (on what kind of picture you should have on social media), Share when your audience is awake (on when to share your post). As much as I appreciated these topics, I just scanned through the more practical ones.

Read this as well if you want to understand Why todays publishing gatekeepers are yesterdays pirates, What the three pillars of a personal brand are (TLC) and if you want to understand why people trust bakers and not eaters (I am a baker).

King Kong Redux

nothing related, I just like murals.
thanks Dinastoria

APE seems to be a complete –all you need to know if you want to publish a book- book and you need to look no further if you have plans. A few nice quotes: an author who doesn’t buy books is a hypocrite; Steve Jobs taught me that little details separate the mediocre from the excellent; Self-publishing isn’t easy, but it is fun, and your book could change the world.

I do have a few doubts about the book, like whether email is still the granddaddy of marketing tools and why LinkedIn is not helpful for establishing a reputation (not to mention the Google+ part). But I guess I should have forwarded those in time. All-in-all: for all writers to be, wholeheartedly recommended.

With a mix of excuses I am procrastinating authoring a book. In my defense, I am collecting book titles for books to be: Snow in his collar (about a man who suddenly finds snow in his collar, which appears to be against the law), Escaped from Oblitus (about a blogger who suddenly becomes famous, against his own will ), Enduring a sense of happiness (when being happy makes you unhappy). By the time I will write a book, APE may just need to be rewritten.

Going (way) beyond pins on a map

2013 February 3
by Jw

Pins on a mapOr “On Data, Mapping & Stories”. Friday last we had a meetup with a group of digital journalists (there seem to be still a few analogue ones around). After an extreme short introduction about Esri – “we love maps”- by the organizer, I gave a short talk, which served as an intro to a full day of working with data, maps and our real aim of the day: stories.

 

Data
There are mountains of data available and that is a nice challenge for us all. Open data is a big contributing factor to the current amount of data available and a great source for journalists. In my opinion, the more data available, the higher the value of the filter. I urge everyone to stay critical on the data itself, the source of the data and what a spatial reference would bring. Just a tip: have your result previewed by a few friends.

Mapping
A nice (great) way to view our world, by projecting a visual grid over phenomena (and do something with what you observe). I thought it would be good to explain a bit about a few basic concepts, like the differences between raster and vector, topographic and thematic, static and realtime data, and maps. These concepts strongly determine what you can do with the data and ultimately what story you can tell. In a sense, cartography is like a choosing a grid on our world.

Stories
My first association with story telling is people: great stories effect peoples lives or their memories. Quickly showed a map of villages in the Netherlands, which have disappeared (yes, one can map entities which no longer exist). My colleague Bert Vermeij jumped in with a few practical examples about local governments,  insurance companies, health policy authorities.

Challenges ahead
The main points I made: stay critical on the data (and sources), understand the appropriate mapping method, do tell real stories with impact. The day continued with a deep dive into ArcGIS Online and Esri Maps for Office.

I think that going (way) beyond pins on a map, helps us to discover more, and tell better stories, stories with more impact. Interesting conversations during the day, looking forward to a follow up. And to more storymaps.

On data mapping stories from Jan Willem van Eck

 

Een GIS gids voor open geodata

2013 January 27

More about The GIS Guide to Public Domain DataThe GIS Guide to Public Domain Data is een publicatie van Esri Press, waarin auteurs Joe Kerski en Jill Clark op allerlei aspecten van open geodata in het publieke domein ingaan. Joe Kerski heb ik een aantal keer ontmoet, hij is een -extreem energieke- collega uit het wereldwijde Esri academische programma. In de meeste recente In Perspectief heb ik een korte bespreking geplaatst, waar helaas een klein foutje ingeslopen is. Wie het vindt, mag het zeggen!

 

Overigens had ik het boek al mogen lezen voordat het is uitgekomen, een bijzondere ervaring. Recent is me dat ook ‘overkomen’ bij een boek van Guy Kawasaki, APE. De –positieve- review plaats ik zeker nog op Anobii en Goodreader.

Het boek is weliswaar uitgegeven door Esri, maar persoonlijk kan voor aanschaf Amazon aanraden (goede aanbiedingen!) Op kantoor hebben we er altijd wel een exemplaar te leen…zeker voor de deelnemers van de Open Geodata workshop!