Difference between revisions of "Courses/Hybrid Publishing"

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== About ==
== About ==
Based on the experience gained from developing the [Beyond Social](http://beyond-social.org/) publishing structure both as a wiki, a website and printable PDF, this course will introduce participants to the concept of hybrid publishing.  
Based on the experience gained from developing the [http://beyond-social.org/ Beyond Social] publishing structure around a wiki, with a website and printable PDFs as outputs, this course will introduce participants to the concept of hybrid publishing, its tools, and encourage them to explore it in different contexts.  


Fundamentally, any process that makes public two or more instances of the same content, under different forms, can be described as a hybrid publishing workflow. Outputs can take the form of a website, a fanzine, a book, an ebook, an animated gif, a sound piece or a video, yet they all have to derive from the same publishing workflow, instead of isolated efforts. It is also essential that both content and its public manifestations are interlinked, so that changes in the content can propagate to the its outputs. From this situation a conversational dynamic can emerge, where the publication's design does not need to wait for the content to be finalized, but both processes can develop at the same time, promoting a dialogue between content and form.
Fundamentally, any process that makes public two or more instances of the same content, under different forms, can be described as a hybrid publishing workflow. Outputs can take the form of a website, a fanzine, a book, an ebook, an animated gif, a sound piece or a video, yet they all derive from the same workflow, instead of isolated efforts. It is also essential that both content and its public manifestations are interlinked, so that changes in content can propagate to the its outputs. From this situation a new dynamic can emerge, where the publication's design does not need to wait for the content to be finalized, but both processes can develop at the same time, promoting a dialogue between content and form.


To achieve such goals an array of tools such as Wiki (environment for collaborative editing), Markup languages (HTML, Markdown and wiki syntax), Git (distributed versioning system), Pandoc (document converter), CSS for print, can be employed and adapted to construct publishing workflows that best suit or content and outputs.  
To achieve such goals an array of tools such as Wikis (online environment for collaborative editing), Markup languages (HTML, Markdown and wiki syntax), Git (distributed versioning system), Pandoc (document converter), CSS (styling for web and print), can be employed and adapted to creation of specific publishing workflows, which best suit content and outputs.  


Participants in this course will become acquainted to these tools and will explore them through simple challenges (e.g. transforming a MSWord document onto to an EPUB; or creating a nice looking PDF from a webpage), which will aid them in building hybrid publishing workflows.
Participants will become acquainted to these tools and will explore them through simple exercises (e.g. transforming a MSWord document onto to an EPUB; or creating a nice looking PDF from a webpage), which will aid them in building hybrid publishing workflows.


== Planning ==
== Planning ==

Revision as of 13:39, 25 June 2015

PROPOSAL

Course Description

Title

Hybrid Publishing

Instructor

André Castro

other possible instructors

?? ??

Station

Publication Station

About

Based on the experience gained from developing the Beyond Social publishing structure around a wiki, with a website and printable PDFs as outputs, this course will introduce participants to the concept of hybrid publishing, its tools, and encourage them to explore it in different contexts.

Fundamentally, any process that makes public two or more instances of the same content, under different forms, can be described as a hybrid publishing workflow. Outputs can take the form of a website, a fanzine, a book, an ebook, an animated gif, a sound piece or a video, yet they all derive from the same workflow, instead of isolated efforts. It is also essential that both content and its public manifestations are interlinked, so that changes in content can propagate to the its outputs. From this situation a new dynamic can emerge, where the publication's design does not need to wait for the content to be finalized, but both processes can develop at the same time, promoting a dialogue between content and form.

To achieve such goals an array of tools such as Wikis (online environment for collaborative editing), Markup languages (HTML, Markdown and wiki syntax), Git (distributed versioning system), Pandoc (document converter), CSS (styling for web and print), can be employed and adapted to creation of specific publishing workflows, which best suit content and outputs.

Participants will become acquainted to these tools and will explore them through simple exercises (e.g. transforming a MSWord document onto to an EPUB; or creating a nice looking PDF from a webpage), which will aid them in building hybrid publishing workflows.

Planning

  • length: 1 kwartaal
  • sessions per week: 1 session per week
  • duration of each session: 3 hours

Course Goals

Previous Publication Station's courses on hybrid publishing

For whom

Anyone interested in the potentialities publishing and willing to challenge its limitation. Participants should be familiar with HTML and CSS.

http://cdn.funniestmemes.com/wp-content/uploads/Funniest_Memes_hipster-kindle-reads-paper-books-ironically_19936.jpeg