Mobile books, collaborative fiction, and Twittories
Posted by henryhutton on December 12, 2007
I’d previously posted elsewhere about what I consider to be the next wave–mobile publishing. More people have cell phones than have laptops, and content generation–videos, photos, messaging, blogging–is becoming the primary reason to have a cell phone as opposed to, well–talking. It was only a matter of time before people took to authoring books via these portable devices.
My bet is that it’s not going to take long for this Japanese phenomenon to run its course through the rest of Asia and Europe, and possibly even here in the Americas. As a matter of fact, Podcast Network CEO Cameron Reilly has launched a collaborative writing initiative he’s calling Twittories–fiction written via the Twitter mobile application.
I can see that. Fiction–especially short stories and poetry, can lend itself to this model. Who knows, this just may be what it takes to get this thing off the ground here in the US.
Back in the day, us Lulu stalwarts used to evangelize the “4C’s”–Content, Collaboration, Community, and Commerce. It’s still difficult to find the commerce needle in the collaboration haystack, but eventually someone will–especially in the realm of user-generated content.
This entry was posted on December 12, 2007 at 6:36 pm and is filed under Lulu.com, apps, books, community, publishing, reading, science fiction, social networking, technology. Tagged: collaboration, Lulu, mobile publishing, Twitter, Twittories. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
December 13, 2007 at 2:19 am
While Riley’s idea is cool, it’s not the only (and certainly NOT the first) Twitter novel out there. I’m on my second: http://www.twitter.com/junkdnafiction
Made in DNA (aka JunkDNA Fiction @ Twitter), Twitter author of BUKKAKE BRAWL and MEDIA WHORES
December 13, 2007 at 3:05 pm
Now that’s cool. I see you also have your content up on Lulu. Are any of your novels via twitter through phone messaging?
December 31, 2007 at 2:18 pm
Via SMS or cell phone mail? If you turn on your SMS options you can DEFINITELY get the novels via Twitter. No problem. Sorry this comment is so late.