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http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/cndy/2011-12/30/content_14354193.htm
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Ben Ehrenreich, author of the novel "Ether" and winner of a 2011 National Magazine Award for his article "The End": That's an easy one: write, write, write and write some more.
Richard Lange, author of the 2013 novel "Gather Darkness" (Mulholland): I'm going to reread "Moby-Dick," "Crime & Punishment," and "The Scarlet Letter." Every time I go back to books that I loved as a kid, I learn more about myself as a writer now.
Dana Spiotta, author of the novel "Stone Arabia": I have many books I want to read this year. For example, I have this inviting stack of Hollywood biographies and memoirs: "Rosebud" by David Thomson, "Frank: The Voice" by James Kaplan, "Run-through" by John Houseman, "Memo" by David O. Selznick, "A Girl Like I" by Anita Loos, and "Vanity Will Get You Somewhere: An Autobiography" by Joseph Cotten.
Antoine Wilson, author of the 2012 novel "Panorama City" (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt): For 2012, I expect to be doing more interacting with strangers, thanks to the new book coming out, so my resolution is simple: To be able to clearly and concisely answer the following question: "What are you reading?"
Jervey Tervalon, author of "Serving Monster" and founder of Literature for Life: Start working on a new novel that will amuse and consume me; and I will not allow myself, not even for a second, to dwell on the bleakness of the publishing industry.
Elizabeth Crane, author of the 2012 novel "We Only Know So Much" (HarperPerennial): I don't know if this is exactly literary, but the only real resolution I'm considering, which I haven't etched in stone yet, is to give up watching entertainment shows (ET, etc). This might or might not help my writing, if only insofar as it will free up an hour of my life every day, but the hope is that it will help my celebrities-and-celebrity-news-makes-me-want-to-pull-my-hair-out problem.
Rachel Kushner, author "Telex from Cuba," a National Book Award finalist: This year I am inspired by my friend Marisa Silver's resolution from last year, which was no internet (except e-mail and occasionally facebook). My resolution is exactly that. Perhaps that's bookish, in that it might create more time in which actual books can be read. I feel better already, sensing the loss of this convenient form of self-sabotage--of time. Time is of a premium. I don't want to waste any. I have a feeling I will miss out on very little without the internet. Whatever it is, if it's important enough it will find me.
Marisa Silver, author of the short story collection "Alone With You": Read more poetry. Use fewer commas.
Evan Ratliff, founding editor of the multimedia iPad magazine The Atavist: I'm not a big resolution maker, but I would say on the literary front mine is pretty simple and obvious. It's building on something I started late this year, which is to carve out specific, disconnected, undistracted time to read every day. Sometimes it's sitting outside with a paperback, having left the phone and all other devices back at the office. Sometimes it's actually reading a book on the phone (as you might imagine, I'm a big fan of reading books on the phone!), but having turned off all the phone's connections. It's like exercise, for me: The whole day gets better if I set aside the time for it. And as much as I love reading digital texts, it's not the same if I stop three times in the middle to deal with some seemingly-urgent-but-not-really email........
25 literary resolutions for 2012. What's yours?Blake Morrison encourages a call to arms for people to fall in love with reading again in 2012
It was an inspiring English teacher who first turned Blake Morrison onto reading ("that's always the case isn't it?" he admits). As a teenager, he fell in love with the moderns including Joyce, Lawrence and Eliot and so a life-long relationship with the written word began.
We have already seen the Wii U with its superior graphics and fancy touchscreen controller and it looks really cool. If you are counting the days until that console launches you will get a kick out of this. Unsurprisingly Nintendo will be offering an app store for the game console. According to the reports that app store won't be like the DSi or the Wii stores, but will be the full-blown type.

A source cited by The Daily claims that the Wii U store will go far beyond what Nintendo has now and will offer a wide variety of game apps and more. What sort of apps will be offered are unknown, but we can make some interesting guesses and assumptions. Naturally, Netflix and other apps will be offered since they are on the Wii already.........
December's holiday season brought with it record sales for Amazon's new Kindle Fire tablet. No surprise, then, that Internet traffic from the device spiked on Christmas day, as Santa's good little boys and girls fired their Fires up for the first time.
According to Millennial Media, ad requests on its network from the Fire increased 261 percent on December 25th and another 46 percent on the 26th.
And for Christmas week entire?
Average daily growth of 113 percent.

Which is impressive. And to be clear, this is not a throwaway metric. Millennial Media's mobile ad network is among the largest in the United States, second only to Google's, so this spike is very real. That said, it will be interesting to see how much staying power the Fire has now that the holidays have ended and we're headed into 2012, which will see the debut of Apple's next iPad.
Kindle Fire Ad Requests Spiked 261 Percent on Christmas Day
Quick Pitch: V.I.K.T.O.R. is an automatic video-editing app.
Genius Idea: The free iPhone app makes movie making and sharing mobile clips quick and easy.
Built-in cameras on smartphone and tablet devices make it easy to record videos of experiences anywhere we go. But how often do we go back to watch these videos or share them?
V.I.K.T.O.R., an automatic video-editing app, provides a simple and convenient way to cut and edit video clips and turn them into short movies. The app allows users to make short movies — either 20 seconds, one minute or two minutes long — that actually look professionally edited. For now, it's free to create a movie, but in the future, the company plans to charge $0.99 for 1-minute movies and $1.99 for two-minute movies.
"We all have special moments that we want to remember," Evgenia Bogdanovich, co-founder of V.I.K.T.O.R., told Mashable. "This video editing app offers a way to recollect your memories and turn them into a video presentation that feels emotional and looks professional."
Developed in June, the idea of V.I.K.T.O.R. was inspired while two of the four co-founders of the app were traveling in Hong Kong. Sergey Nurmamed and Alexander Didenko saw tourists taking pictures and recording videos with their phones, and wondered how often people actually go back and look at these memories. When Nurmamed and Didenko returned to Russia, the V.I.K.T.O.R. team decided to create an automatic-editing app to make it easier for people to create movies from their experiences and share them with friends and family.
To start making mini-movies, download the app onto an iPhone and choose one of the following video-editing options:
After you select an option, users can also add in their own themes and soundtracks. Browse the list of categories (travels, sports, family, events, lifestyle or moods) and select a theme that suits your movie. Then create a movie title and select the mobile clips that you want to include........

Since the world is going to end this year and everything, it's never been a better time to follow the advice of P.J. O'Rourke, who recommends that you "always read something that will make you look good if you die in the middle of it." Not that anyone will be around to see you, we guess. Luckily, there are a ton of really exciting books coming out this year, including many that we'd be racing to read apocalypse or no, and good looks aside. Since publishing schedules are not often announced super-far in advance, and they're subject to change based on a million factors, this is really a first half of 2012 list, heavy on spring releases, to be followed by a second-half of the year list in the summer. Click through to check out the books we're most looking forward to in the first half of this year (boy was it hard to narrow it down to just ten!), and let us know which others you're having trouble waiting for in the comments. The Flame Alphabet, Ben Marcus (January) If we could submerge ourselves in Ben Marcus's language, we would - although, if we subscribe to the logic of this newest novel, where the words and voices of children begin to rapidly poison the bodies of the adults around them, we should probably be a little more careful about how we interact with the stuff. We can't help it, though - this affecting, cerebral horror story about love and language is Marcus's best work yet..........
What if Ayn Rand's iconic hero from Atlas Shrugged were among us? How would John Galt invest? The obvious answer would be to look at the advice given by the libertarian hero's self-proclaimed followers.
There is an abundance of high profile libertarian investors from Peter Schiff to Peter Thiel. Asset allocation and stock picks vary little across investors and (more worryingly) across time. Here are the five basics principles of libertarian investing:
I doubt that John Galt would invest with his self-proclaimed followers. For one, they are horrible investors. The "libertarian portfolio" has taken a beating lately. Gold and the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) are down 20% from the peak. The U.S. dollar index has gained 11% since late April. European blue chips have sunk with the continent's finances. Domestic value stocks have underperformed both cyclical and growth-oriented stocks as the U.S. economy proved surprisingly resilient in recent months.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/greatspeculations/2011/12/30/steve-jobs-was-the-modern-day-john-galt/?feed=rss_homeI recently got a glimpse into the future of books. A few months ago, I dug out a handful of old essays I'd written about innovation, combined them into a single document, and uploaded the file to Amazon's Kindle Direct Publishing service. Two days later, my little e-book was on sale at Amazon's site. The whole process couldn't have been simpler.
Then I got the urge to tweak a couple of sentences in one of the essays. I made the edits on my computer and sent the revised file back to Amazon. The company quickly swapped out the old version for the new one. I felt a little guilty about changing a book after it had been published, knowing that different readers would see different versions of what appeared to be the same edition. But I also knew that the readers would be oblivious to the alterations.
An e-book, I realized, is far different from an old-fashioned printed one. The words in the latter stay put. In the former, the words can keep changing, at the whim of the author or anyone else with access to the source file. The endless malleability of digital writing promises to overturn a whole lot of our assumptions about publishing.
When Johannes Gutenberg invented movable type a half-millennium ago, he also gave us immovable text. Before Gutenberg, books were handwritten by scribes, and no two copies were exactly the same. Scribes weren't machines; they made mistakes. With the arrival of the letterpress, thousands of identical copies could enter the marketplace simultaneously. The publication of a book, once a nebulous process, became an event.
A new set of literary workers coalesced in publishing houses, collaborating with writers to perfect texts before they went on press. The verb "to finalize" became common in literary circles, expressing the permanence of printed words. Different editions still had textual variations, introduced either intentionally as revisions or inadvertently through sloppy editing or typesetting, but books still came to be viewed, by writer and reader alike, as immutable objects. They were written for posterity....... ...
Big data and sentiment analysis can do amazing things, whether it's in the enterprise or in the quest to create compelling applications and experiences for consumers. But can technology trends such as these actually predict major real-world events?
As sci-fi as it may sound, that's exactly what researcher Kalev Leetaru was able to accomplish with a little help from SGI's Altix UV supercomputer packing 8.2 teraflops of processing power. Leetaru, a digital media analytics expert at the University of Illinois, wrote software that can scan over 100 million news articles and uses sentiment analysis, text geocoding and predictive analytics to determine when political upheaval will go from rowdy to revolutionary........
Can the World's Next Political Revolution Be Predicted By Computers?Q. I want to publish my own e-book and sell it online on a major Web site. Where do I start?
Writing, editing and proofreading your book manuscript is the first step. Once you have finished your book, perhaps one of the easiest ways to get it out there for sale is to use publishing tools from the major online bookstores like Amazon and Barnes and Noble.
Amazon has a Kindle Direct Publishing service that lets you self-publish your own e-books and sell them in its online Kindle store. The site has tutorials for properly formatting and uploading your book file to make it compatible with the Kindle, Amazon's own e-reader hardware. You need an account to use the service, but you can use your existing Amazon.com account if you already buy things from the site. Amazon's Kindle Direct Publishing Help page has the information you need to get started, including an explanation of the royalties you can earn and Amazon's share of the profits...
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