Live notes from Royal Society conference on scientific publishing challenges including peer review crisis, AI poisoning threats and open access economics.
What if the problems with the news ecosystem could be solved by shutting off the data pipeline to the advertisers? After all, they’ve spent the last 30 years aggressively exploiting it—and us.
Once upon a time, before the internet, there were attempts to combine magazines and catalogs together. The weird part? For a while, it worked!
America’s postwar fling with romance comics—and the massive collection of those comics that was recently donated to the University of South Carolina.
For more than 25 years, this newsletter author has been snarking wise about weird news. Here’s the tale of This is True, one of the first inbox success stories.
Pondering the success that Penn Jillette, the loud half of Penn & Teller, found as a sometimes-rebellious big-name computer magazine columnist in the ’90s.
For nearly 30 years, many schools aired a daily news show in exchange for free AV equipment. Channel One was a hit—but the ads drove seemingly everyone crazy.
The story of Uncle John’s Bathroom Reader, the greatest book series of all time that targets a uniquely captive audience. The series turns 30 this year.
How the “Who’s Who” concept of reference books devolved from a genuinely useful idea into a very costly form of vanity publishing.
Books and periodicals about the internet were a curious phenomenon—in no small part because they frequently pandered to the largest possible audience.
For a brief time in the '90s, publishers thought that CD-ROM magazines were the future. But, as it turned out, readers were more interested in the internet.
Before we used the internet to find computer parts, we used Computer Shopper, a magazine that commonly had over 800 pages in a single issue. Really.
Lists are one of the most important writing tools we have, and we love using them frequently. Here's where they came from, and why they work so well.