ArticlesReader.com

 

ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Ezine Marketing

An Embarrassment of Riches - Part II

Author : Sam Vaknin

The DOI Foundation has unveiled the DOI-EB (EB stands for e-books) Initiative in the Book Expo America Show 2001, to, in their words:

"Determine requirements with respect to the application of unique identifiers to eBooks

Develop proofs-of-concept for the use of DOIs with eBooks

Develop technical demonstrations, possibly including a prototype eBook Registration Agency."

It is backed by a few major publishers, such as McGraw-Hill, Random House, Pearson, and Wiley.

http://www.doi.org/

This ostensibly modest agenda conceals a revolutionary and ambitious attempt to unambiguously identify the origin of digital content (in this case, e-books) and link a universe of information to each and every ID number. Aware of competing efforts underway, the DOI Foundation is actively courting the likes of "indecs" (Interoperability of Data in E-Commerce System) and OeBF (Open e-Book). Companies ,like Enpia Systems of South Korea (a DOI Registration Agency), have already implemented a DOI-cum-indecs system. On November 2000, the APA's (American Publishers' Association) Open E-book Publishing Standards Initiative has recommended to use DOI as the primary identification system for e-books' metadata. The MPEG (Motion Pictures Experts Group) is said to be considering DOI seriously in its efforts to come up with numbering and metadata standards for digital videos.

A DOI can be expressed as a URN (Universal Resource Name - IETF's syntax for generic resources) and is compatible with OpenURL (a syntax for embedding parameters such as identifiers and metadata in links). Shortly, a "Namespace Dictionary" is to be published. It will encompass 800 metadata elements and will tackle e-books, journals, audio, and video. A working group was started to develop a "services definition" interface (i.e., to allow web-enabled systems, especially e-commerce and m-commerce systems, to deploy DOI).

The DOI, in other words, is designed to be all-inclusive and all-pervasive. Each DOI number is made of a prefix, specific to a publisher, and a suffix, which could end up painlessly assimilating the ISBN and ISSN (or any other numbering and database) system.

Thus, a DOI can be assigned to every e-book based on its ISBN and to every part (chapter, section, or page) of every e-book. This flexibility could support Pay Per View models (such as Questia's or Fathom's), POD (Print On Demand), and academic "course packs", which comprise material from many textbooks, whether on digital media or downloadable. The DOI, in other words, can underlie D-CMS (Digital Content Management Systems) and Electronic Catalogue ID Management Systems.

Moreover, the DOI is a paradigm shift (though, conceptually, it was preceded by the likes of the UPC code and the ISO's HyTime multimedia standard). It blurs the borders between types of digital content. Imagine an e-novel with the video version of the novel, the sound track, still photographs, a tourist guide, an audio book, and other digital content embedded in it. Each content type and each segment of each content type can be identified and tagged separately and, thus, sold separately - yet all under the umbrella of the same DOI! The nightmare of DRM (digital rights management) may be finally over.

But the DOI is much more than a sophisticated tagging technology. It comes with multiple resolution (see "Embarrassment of Riches - Part I"). In other words, as opposed to the URL (Universal Resource Locator) - it is generated dynamically, "on the fly", by the user, and is not "hard coded" into the web page. This is because the DOI identifies content - not its location. And while the URL resolves to a single web page - the DOI resolves to a lot more in the form of publisher-controlled (ONIX-XML) "metadata" in a pop-up (Javascript or other) screen. The metadata include everything from the author's name through the book's title, edition, blurbs, sample chapters, other promotional material, links to related products, a rights and permissions profile, e-mail contacts, and active links to retailers' web pages. Thus, every book-related web page becomes a full fledged book retailing gateway. The "anchor document" (in which the DOI is embedded) remains uncluttered. ONIX 2.0 may contain standard metadata fields and extensions specific to e-publishing and e-books.

This latter feature - the ability to link to the systems of retailers, distributors, and other types of vendors - is the "barcode" function of the DOI. Like barcode technology, it helps to automate the supply chain, and update the inventory, ordering, billing and invoicing, accounting, and re-ordering databases and functions. Besides tracking content use and distribution, the DOI allows to seamlessly integrate hitherto disparate e-commerce technologies and facilitate interoperability among DRM systems.

The resolution itself can take place in the client's browser (using a software plug-in), in a proxy server, or in a central, dynamic server. Resolving from the client's PC, e-book reader, or PDA has the advantage of being able to respond to the user's specific condition (location, time of day, etc.). No plug-in is required when a proxy server HTTP is used - but then the DOI becomes just another URL, embedded in the page when it is created and not resolved when the user clicks on it. The most user-friendly solution is, probably, for a central server to look up values in response to a user's prompt and serve her with cascading menus or links. Admittedly, in this option, the resolution tables (what DOI links to what URL's and to what content) is not really dynamic. It changes only with every server update and is static between updates. But this is a minor inconvenience. As it is, users are likely to respond with some trepidation to the need to install plug-ins and to the avalanche of information their single, innocuous, mouse click generates.

The DOI Foundation has compiled this impressive list of benefits - and beneficiaries:

"Publishers to enable cross referencing to related information, control over metadata, viral distribution and sales, easy access to content, sale of granular content

Consumers to increase value for time and money, and purchase options

Distributors to facilitate sale and distribution of materials as well as user needs

Retailers to build related materials on their sites, heighten consumer usability and copyright protection

Conversion Houses/Wholesaler Repositories to increase access to and use of metadata

DRM Vendors/Rights Clearing Houses to enable interoperability and use of standards

Data Aggregators to enable compilation of primary and secondary content and print on demand

Trade Associations facilitate dialog on social level and attend to legal and technical perspectives pertaining to multiple versions of electronic content

eBbook software Developers to enable management of personal collections of eBooks including purchase receipt information as reference for quick return to retailer

Content Management System Vendors to enable internal synching with external usage

Syndicators to drive sales to retailers, add value to retail online store/sales, and increase sales for publishers"

The DOI is assigned to publishers by Registration Agencies (of which there are currently three - CrossRef and Content Directions in the States and the aforementioned Enpia Systems in Asia). It is already widely used to cross reference almost 5,000 periodicals with a database of 3,000,000 citations. The price is steep - it costs a publisher $200 to get a prefix and submit DOI's to the registry. But as Registration Agencies proliferate, competition is bound to slash these prices precipitously.

About The Author

Sam Vaknin is the author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited" and "After the Rain - How the West Lost the East". He is a columnist in "Central Europe Review", United Press International (UPI) and ebookweb.org and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory, Suite101 and searcheurope.com. Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of Macedonia.

His web site: http://samvak.tripod.com

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Ezine Publishing Don'ts
  2. You Can Develop An E-zine Even If You Don't Enjoy Writing!
  3. How to Build Your List – 7 Powerful Strategies
  4. OK People - Let's Get Real!
  5. How To Write Effective Ezine Ads... And Then Some
  6. American OverDrive - LCD's in LDC's
  7. An Embarrassment of Riches - Part I
  8. An Embarrassment of Riches - Part II
  9. Future of Electronic Publishing
  10. Medium and the Message
  11. Review of Ezine Announcer
  12. Start Your Own Ezine Newsletter & Profit!
  13. Internet Marketing Strategy: 9 Pragmatic Ways Increase Your E-zine's Subscription
  14. Some Things I Have Learned About the Exciting World of Ezines
  15. Publish Articles Online: Start With Your Own ezine
  16. 10 Ways, How To Get Significant Exposure For Free
  17. Coping With Those Dreaded Ezine Publishing Deadlines
  18. Covering All The Bases: How to Make Sure Your Newsletter Gets Opened and Read
  19. Convert Your Newsletters into Immediate Cash
  20. 3 Money-Making Reasons for Displaying Your Newsletters on Your Website
  21. Self Publishing At The Speed Of Thought
  22. How To Publish Your Own Highly Demand Ezine
  23. Subscriber Incentives: Are They Effective?
  24. 6 Important Tips For Choosing Ezine To Advertise In
  25. Top 7 Techniques For Generating Subscribers To A Newsletter
More related feeds
Embarrassment of Riches: 01.07.09 « Hawty McBloggy Invites You to Play
Embarrassment of Riches: 01.07.09. 7 01 2009. xbox live marketplace. To make up for the fact that there were no retail releases for the first week of January, Microsoft announced that their super awesome addition (and by super awesome ...

SLING WORDS: Format For Web Writing
It's only human nature to scan content, looking for the sought information. What's the bottom line? What are you looking for? Where are the facts? Causes of Glazed Eye Syndrome 1. Too much information. An embarrassment of riches. 2. ...

Kate Hudson, Anne Hathaway Interview, Bride Wars - MoviesOnline
It seems to be an embarrassment of riches that I supposed I have to learn to get comfortable with. MoviesOnline: Anne, can you talk about your role in Alice in Wonderland? Anne: I play the White Queen in it, and I think that’s all that ...

Lowetide: An Embarrassment Of Riches
LT I guess Riley Nash isn't part of the picture? 11:49 AM, January 04, 2009 · dawgbone said... The Finish kid padded his stats with a 5 pointer against Khazakstan, meaning he had 2 points going into the game. ...

What in the World?: Oh look, it's Christmas eve....
1 hour ago. Crooks and Liars · Open Thread - A video in support of The Alternative Invocation blogswarm. PS. The Weblog Awards voting has started. In an embarrassment of riches, Crooks and Liars is... 2 hours ago. I Used To Be Witty . ...

Win a Case of Kate The Great | blogaboutbeer.com
J. Christie: terms of beer, we have an embarrassment of riches here in Maine. My apartment is literally a few miles... Portland-Based Gritty McDuff’s Celebrates its 21st Birthday With Release of a new IPA (2). Jerkwater Brewing Co. ...

Top 2008 Techstack Articles for EBS 12 (Part 3) (Oracle E-Business ...
When it comes to resources for your R12 upgrade, there's an embarrassment of riches. Start here. Apps Release 12.0.6 Release Update Pack Now Available Possibly the most important release from the E-Business Suite division this year. ...

New York City: Hot Chocolate Season | WhisperTrail
Residents of New York City enjoy an embarrassment of culinary riches in all sorts of niche categories, which means that the winter hot chocolate selection is incredibly diverse. I’ve identified three of my personal favorite hot ...

Aero-News Network: The Aviation and Aerospace World's Daily/Real ...
When it comes to the people, planes and products of the aviation business, ANN firmly believes there is no such thing as an embarrassment of riches. 2008 saw a spate of new programs and 'gadgets' designed to separate a pilot from his ...

It's Sunny in SD: An embarrassment of riches!
Not a good horse weeked: Part 3 - Sunday · Not a good horse weekend: Part 2 - Saturday · Not a good horse weekend: Part 1 - Friday · Friday Book Review: jumps, choices, and decisions... An embarrassment of riches! ...