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DK Publishing's Visual Guides and Travel Guides Coming to iPad?

June 18, 2010

Dk_ipad

I'm not much of a coffee table book person.  First, I don't own a coffee table.  Second, most of these books are bigger than my apartment.   They never sit nicely on a shelf, or fit properly in a box.  Yes, my troubles know no end.  But I make an exception for the Definitive Visual Guides and Eyewitness Travel Guides series published by Dorling Kindersley (DK).  If there is such a thing as a well-worn coffee table book, my copy of "The Universe: a Definitive Visual Guide" certainly qualifies. 

DK Publishing is renowned for its distinctive, beautifully illustrated edu-tainment books.  They are also known for nearly bankrupting themselves in 1999 by miscalculating consumer demand for 18 million Star Wars books.  Reminiscent of the great Atari 2600 E.T. game disaster of 1982, DK sold only a fraction of their inventory.  However, instead of dumping all the books in a landfill like Atari did with the game cartridges, D.K. continued to make efforts to sell off the extra inventory.  In 2000 DK was taken over by the Pearson PLC media company and made part of Penguin Group, which also owns the Penguin Books label.

But back to the books.  The photographs are gorgeous, the diagrams are rich and immersive, and there's just enough digestible, bite-sized nuggets of information to keep you engrossed and engaged in discovery for hours on end.

Dk-animals

In other words, exactly the kind of content you'd want to consume on a tablet.

Thankfully, someone at Penguin agrees.  As I was doing some research for a current iOS project, I stumbled upon the concept video below from Penguin that hints at what an Definitive Visual Guide and an Eyewitness Travel Guide experience might look like on an iPad.

While not nearly as impressive as Bonnier's futuristic concept video for Pop Sci magazine, the ideas in this DK/Penguin video are far more realistic and achievable.  But you only need to browse one of their real books to see how nicely their content could be converted to 3D interactive graphics and timelines, video, popovers, and searchable text for a tablet.  I particularly enjoy the implied feature in the Paris Travel Guide that allows you to create an itinerary. 

Here's to hoping I can retire my cumbersome and dogeared copy of "The Universe" to a storage locker someday soon.

 

Filed under  //   iPad   publishing   tablets  

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Beautiful concept eMag reader will give you goose bumps

December 19, 2009

In 1804 Gerhard Bonnier opened a small bookstore in Copenhagen. Since then the Bonnier family has promoted high-quality media products and now, after over 200 years of sustainable media entrepreneurship, they are now a multi-channel media company with experience and knowledge from a full range of media companies across 20 countries.

Berg is a design consultancy in the UK, and works with companies to research and develop their technologies and strategy, primarily by finding opportunities in networks and physical things

Together, Berg and Bonnier have developed this amazing concept video in which they attempt to reinvent the digital magazine for a world in which interactivity, abundant information, and unlimited options are often intrusive and overwhelming.

Of particular note is the elegance and simplicity of the gestural interaction model utilized across all of the examples. Notice how a high degree of interactivity is achieved with a minimal amount of intuitive gestures.  The effortless interface combined with a highly intelligent informational architecture will leave you wishing you could go to sleep tonight and wake up sometime in the world of tomorrow.

If after watching this you want more (and I know you will) you can watch an extended narrated version of the video here

Filed under  //   interfaces    publishing   tablets  

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The Future of Magazines?

December 6, 2009

This has been making the rounds lately.  It's vaporware a vision piece from The Wonderfactory and Time, Inc. giving us a glimpse of how the collapsing magazine publishing industry intends on saving themselves.

Conspicuously absent is any ad content.

One thing’s for certain.  A re-platforming of this nature won't be cheap.  Then of course there's the small matter of the hardware.

 

Filed under  //   publishing   tablets  

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