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Perhaps Paul should be the one covering this, since he’s the one who’s actually gone to e-book conferences over the last couple of years—but since I’m the one who’s awake right now, I’m calling dibs.

Edward Nawotka has a pair of posts on Publishing Perspectives—a feature and a short editorial—relating to the subjects of e-book conferences. While Tools of Change was going on, Nawotka was serving jury duty. This gives him an opening to find some amusing similarities between the two events: they both involve taking time off from work and travelling to strange environs, listening to “experts”, and standing in judgment.

Then he gets to the point:

Now, I want you to consider what it would be like if you were required to serve jury duty every week for the next several months.That’s what it currently feels like in the book business right now.

Since December, Nawotka notes, there have been three e-book conferences, and over the next few months there are going to be half a dozen more. These conferences eat up a lot of time, but “provide the raw material for inspiration” for moving forward in the industry.

In the editorial, Nawotka takes note of the time and money required to attend all these conferences (or for that matter, even one conference) and wonders whether it amounts to “a pay-wall around best-practices” that could create an “e-book elite” in the persons of those who can afford to attend.

It’s a good question. Perhaps someday, if I can attend such an event, I will be able to see what it is like to be part of the answer. I must admit to feeling a bit of envy for the people who are able to attend these events—though I suspect I would feel rather less envy if I actually did manage to attend one.

 
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