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#271 | |
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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Oh, dear. You wound me, sir, by maligning my friend Toxaris unjustly. To quote Lord Peter Wimsey, in, I believe, "Have His Carcase," you drive me to the vulgarity of reminding you who I am.
I'm not, by any means, the most expert bookmaker on this forum. Far from it. Nor am I a programmer. I bow and defer to the wonks and geeks here, whose work amazes me. I'm not even the most successful person, by far. I am, however, pretty much the only one here that runs a conversion business full-time. Other people here do, of course, create eBooks professionally, but the point I'm about to make is about numbers. My company has, in the last seven years, formatted and converted more than 3,000 books. I believe that gives me some standing to address that statement. And I can tell you in absolutely no uncertain terms that publishers do not give two craps about metadata. For every book we've done, since about mid-2009, I've handed out our metadata sheet, to be completed by the Publisher and returned to us for inclusion in their books. Now, ask me exactly how many have come back finished? How many have come back, at all? How many have come back with naught more than "title, name, and year of copyright" completed? The answers to those questions are--about 20%; about 30%; nearly 70% never return the metadata sheet at all, and of the 30% that are returned to us for inclusion, most are simply the title, name of the author, and year of copyright. Period. Quote:
You need to hang out at some other fora, where self-pubs hang out. That "95%" that you think you're talking about, in your post about our workout book. (P.S.: you're wrong about that, too, but...<shrug>). Go to the KDP forums for self-publishers, and hang out wherever those Smashwords publishers hang out. See what those folks say about formatting their books. The same people that find uploading a Word file to Amazon, or Smashwords, "too hard." That's the bulk of self-publishers. You err, sir, in assuming that all self-pubs can manage what you're describing, or can afford to have a company like mine format their books. Many using systems like "Draft2Digital" to clean their HTML, instead of doing it themselves. If these folks can't manage to upload a clean Word file to Smashwords, how on EARTH do you expect them to use the system you're proposing? And, again: how will you stop people from doing things like typing "xxxxxxx" for any of the text-based metadata? Author name? First name? Description? Year of Copyright, for that matter? I'm an old database girl, and I know firsthand that there's only so much error-trapping you can do when it comes to text. That has nothing to do with whether we're discussing XML, XHTML, or Bob's Big Book Format. Nothing you're discussing will make things like, "all covers designed by Fred Smith" viable for you to search upon, because, as Toxaris correctly pointed out, publishers don't care. And frankly, by and large (at my guess, 95+%), neither do most readers. The metadata that they are interested in is what's already available via the Amazon, Nook, iBooks, webpages. They have precisely zero interest in whether or not the metadata about the minutiae is correct, inside the book. Oh, well. I suppose that suffering through this thread is better than attending to my annual agony of getting our Holiday Greeting card done. Zounds, procrastination writ large. ![]() Hitch |
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#272 | |
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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You really are too kind. Trust me when I say that there are at least 10 people here on this forum, regularly, who are far more experienced than I; and, at least, four people in my company who could have me for breakfast. Mostly, I'm the carnival barker these days, not the attraction inside the tent. ![]() Nonetheless, I genuinely thank you for your kind words. Hitch |
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#273 | |||
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It does not matter whether they are using converters or ask third parties to format books for them: in any case results achieved by a specialized format will give better results than a badly made EPUB and still better results with a proper EPUB. Quote:
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#274 |
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Exactly. The reader software is not required to use XSLT or HTML as intermediary formats. At the end it will be styled page elements.
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#275 |
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Another EPUB problem is that you need to have "experienced book creators" to work around the weirdness of EPUB format and device quirks. A good book format is cross-platform, and put the burden of displaying it on the reader, not the book author.
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#276 | ||||
Ex-Helpdesk Junkie
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(Named text fields. But our text fields are already named, you just want to give them different names and mark them as mandatory.) Quote:
And you are targeting the Word-users, I think -- the ones who don't put care into the books. But your format doesn't stop them doing stupid things (and in short order someone will probably write a program that automatically turns a badly-formatted DOCX into a badly-formatted file in your "specialized format"). You have repeatedly made the assertion that your proposed format is better, but you have not backed up your assertion with evidence. ... Also, on behalf of EPUB, I take offense at your claim that EPUB isn't a specialized format. Quote:
![]() If they don't give a damn about doing a good job now, why would they give a damn if it was more convenient? As Hitch said: Quote:
Are you truly arguing with extensive, professional experience in the exact scenario you are raising? |
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#277 | |
Wizard
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The metadata (or lack of) will not disturb my reading experience. You only read what you want to read and pick lines from responses and are behaving pretty daft. Try to read and understand the answers instead of glancing at them. Then again, based on your responses in this thread, I will not get my hopes up. Let's just say you have your opinion, just don't confuse an opinion with the hard cold truth of the real world. Let me just state it again. * Publishers don't care about metadata * Almost all readers don't care about metadata * Publishers are fine with the current format for most types of books, exception being perhaps poetry. * Almost all readers are fine with the current format for most types of books. * XHTML can be use semantically if you want. Nothing prevents that. * You can add any metadata in a book you want * You can separate first name and last name. If it is more difficuly, the file-as property can help. You will probably not read this anyway, but fine. |
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#278 | |
The Grand Mouse 高貴的老鼠
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XML itself just defines the syntax of tags (the angle brackets, the way attributes of tags are given, etc.). A schema defines the structure of an XML file - what tags are available, and when they can be used. A parser for XML files can verify that an XML files matches the specifications given in a schema. CSS is a way to apply styling to XHTML tagged elements. Not a schema. By calling for XML, the OP is saying nothing. XML documents require a schema. Which is what DocBook provides. Everything the OP wants is provided by DocBook - meaningful tags for document elements, for many, many kinds of documents. And yet the OP has rejected DocBook. And XHTML (another XML implementation). I think the OP really needs to go away and do a few months research on what's currently available, and on the meanings of the terms XML, Schema, DTD, XTHML, CSS, and especially, DocBook. Last edited by pdurrant; 12-16-2015 at 04:42 AM. |
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#279 | ||||||
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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Experienced book creators aren't needed to work around "the weirdness" of ePUB format and alleged "device quirks" (iBooks, anyone?). It has nothing to do with weirdness or quirks. Some books are simply vastly more complex than others. That's not "ePUB weirdness." Nor have you provided ANY freaking indication AT ALL why your proposed PITS would be better. Or how it would, even in your imagination, somehow be free of needing advanced bookmaking to deal with these same layout elements. For sample, a sidebar, or pull-quote. The PITS that you've proposed is, for all intents and purposes (wait for it) DocBook. The XML uses an XSLT to transform it to--wait for it--ePUB. That's how that XML file is subsequently displayed on a device. How is it that you think that PITS would magically make the creation of a sidebar "easier?" As near as I can tell, your idea is, when bookmaking, I'd simply call the main content <body> and the sidebar <sidebar>, and then if millions of readers didn't see it right, the onus is on THEM? I'm supposed to say, "well, tough s**t, kiddies, you have to tell your device how to display the sidebar, and you didn't, so nyah nyah nyah?" When they're telling their device how to display "all" sidebars, @Sarmat89, how do they know how small, or how large, sidebars have to be for different books? How do they know how large or how small the heading next to it is intended to be? By PFM? Magic? I've attached just a handful of images (guys: warning--these images are large-ish, set to 600w). as an exemplar. And these are a mere handful; not particularly complex, not spectacularly simple. A typical moderate-to-heavily-formatted ePUB. How would you possibly envision doing these with XML, leaving the rendering up to the individual reader? If you can pass an XSLT with the file--fine. But leaving it up to the individual reader is simply cracked. It reeks of inexperience. The problem as I see it here is that you've gone as far as thinking that XML is some magic cure-all for what you perceive as "hard stuff" in ePUB, and your desire for more metadata. You have given precisely zero thought to how it actually implements. You've provided all of us with exactly zero real, concrete examples as to how your idea is "better;" you simply keep saying that it IS. You obviously didn't spend a lot of time on your school's debate team, either, or you'd know that simply reasserting your opinion, over and over, without any data or facts or ANYTHING else to back it up, is worthless. Hitch |
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#280 |
Wizard
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He has already given the answer how your example pics should be done, with PDF. Because they are an exception in his mind. So, I would think one PDF per reader and for each possible resolution to get the best results. That would indeed be much, much better than ePUB...
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#281 | |
Ex-Helpdesk Junkie
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![]() Get off my lawn... |
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#282 | |
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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![]() ![]() Books like these are about 50% of my annual business. If he thinks that these are exceptions, it's only more proof that his experience with real books, in a real book business, is extraordinarily limited. Fiction books are, by and large, simplicity itself. Indeedy. I realize that I'm just wasting my time here. But I suppose it's better to pseudo-vent here than at my clientele. It's a good thing that you guys are here to keep me from going right off the deep end. Hitch |
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#283 | ||||||
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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Hitch |
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#284 | |||||||||
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Also, you cannot choose an arbitrarily complex format like HTML/CSS or DocBook, as the clients will not be able to implement it fully. You need a clear, compact and comprehensive format that everyone can implement in its entirety. Quote:
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Therefore, same methods can be employed to create a semantically structured document. Quote:
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The other have a simple layout: headings, illustrations with captions, unordered lists, inline images, footnotes. Fonts and colors are for user to choose. Also, a reader rendering the semantically-defined footnote could take measures not to break the line before its marker. Quote:
To render a semantic sidebar, you can use any model your reader is working with: you already know what you need to do, you don't need to copy the physical formatting to imitate it. |
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#285 | ||
Wizard
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Please name them. We know none. Quote:
Put your money where your mouth is and come up with straight answers. |
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