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OpenReaderBlackmask, one of my favorite sites for public domain books, carried a little item about the $99K that Nick Bogaty, executive director of the International Digital Publications Forum, pulls down working from home. Hey, nothing against Nick personally. I just think it’s a shame that the IDPF leadership hasn’t let the group do its job and go for consumer-level standards for e-books. Time to spin standards off to OpenReader and let Nick and the rest concentrate on trade association issues? With more focus and better results, Nick could justify his salary. Perhaps a well-directed IDPF could even have helped prevent discriminatory VATs on e-books in Europe.

David Moynihan, Mr. Blackmask, also took a poke at OpenReader–for a site that isn’t updated often enough. I totally agree, David. But we’ll have a solution in the near future–along with far more important news–and meanwhile the TeleBlog is one place to look for OpenReader updates. As a standards booster, Interim Exec Director Jon Noring wants the site to be pure XHTML without tables even if that means more fuss and less updating. I’m more of a pragmatist. Our compromise will be easy.openreader.org, a faster-paced site written for publishers and other civilians. We’ll most likely use Mambo, Drupal or another CMS. Suggestions and volunteers welcomed, especially help from CMS folks. Handcrafted sites are so 90ish. Eventually TeleRead.org, too, will enter the 21st century. The real action, of course, has shifted over to the WordPress-driven TeleBlog, reducing the urgency of a full-site makeover

 
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