Saturday, April 23, 2011

Printing Industry News Digest April 23, 2011

Welcome to Printing Industry News Digest (PIND) issue 49, the summary of major news stories from the printing, packaging, digital and communication sectors. Welcome to the latest edition of PIND, incorporating brief summaries and links to the week’s key news stories so that you can look up that all important detail.

Hardware is very much in focus this week as we try to summarise the state of user platforms. Our first pit-stop has to incorporate a feature from the Guardian of this week that states that desktop PC sales might well have hit their peak, citing a fall in sales in PC’s when compared to the first quarter of 2010 by 1.1% overall, but a more significant 6.1% in the United States.

Meanwhile, are you a liberal, vegetarian, city based computer user? You must be an Apple hardware fan, according to this infogram from Gigacom. The chart looks to compare Mac v. PC people (for whatever reason!), and amid some very odd areas of comparison, PC users are more likely to fall into the older age group (that’s PIND then!).

The netbook, it would seem, has had its short life as its window of opportunity appears to be closing pretty quickly. Born out of a need for smaller format, lower cost, more portable computing, the netbooks arrival was especially well received by the young, but with the creation of tablet computing, the netbook is undoubtedly already in decline. Even Google’s Chrome OS is now having tablet functionality added, and is also being described as a notebook product, rather than the original netbook OS.


What to do if your PC or Mac develops a fault? This often pondered question has become the latest topic for The Oatmeal to muse on. As regular readers will know, we do hold a torch here for the works of The Oatmeal, so do spend a moment enjoying this latest (far too brief) offering: How to Fix any Computer.

In the world of the e-book reader, we find out this week that first quarter sales of digital publications have outsold the paper format. ReadWriteWeb asks if this is good or bad for publishers; we say good for publishers, but bad for printers. Publishers will have to learn to deal with the piracy issue, but then if they chat with the good folk of the music industry they might find out a thing or two! Also worth noting: audiobooks have continued to grow their share of the market, up 37% v. February 2010.

Amazon, king of the e-book reader suppliers, has made further announcements this week regarding e-book library facilities. The story, mentioned this week by various stories, is that over 11,000 American lending libraries will incorporate the facility to lend out digital versions of books to Kindle or Kindle app users. From a marketing perspective, one has to salute the move as an effort to get establishment approval of the format.

As we speed along into tablet talk, the Telegraph tells us that tablets such as the iPad will need to fall to a price point below £250 before they can become mainstream. Interesting point, but then maybe we need to just stand back a bit: we are just one year into the popular form of tablet computing; only just past the first wave of buyers, the innovators. Undoubtedly prices will fall, and most likely they will eventually dip down below £250. Apple is unlikely to lead the way in this move; they will lead by technological development, not by price. The mass manufacturing power of Sumsung is more likely to focus, eventually, on pile it high and sell it cheap marketing.

Not that this will happen any time soon, according to numbers released this week by Goldman Sachs. They are predicting a continued Apple dominance for the next two years. Further number crunching from Digits offers some further evidence, if any were needed, that Apple is still dominant in the areas of the market that it wants to be in (ie, the bits with the money!).

RIM has finally made it, however, so maybe Apple should keep looking over its shoulder to see how the Blackberry PlayBook is selling (450,000 in the first week, according to industry figures). We can only see it succeeding in firm Blackberry intrenched markets, and even then the name might let it down (business markets having a PlayBook? Doesn't sound right does it!). Perhaps one to keep an even keener eye on: Amazon is rumoured to be looking seriously at the tablet market. Utilising Samsung hardware, the company already has so many good things in place from its Kindle efforts in the e-book market. This one would be worth watching!

And the Polestar Story:
Having reviewed all of that hardware, we do also need to give a quick mention to the news of the week from the printing industry, with the purchase of Polestar. We first saw it announed in the Telegraph, and PrintWeek have added some more detail. PrintWeek provided some great informed detail on the pension fund issue, which has been a long standing area of conflict for the company.

Finally, do keep checking back to see what will be featured in our next edition, PIND 50. Details of our “half-century” edition will be added to this link during the course of the week.

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Want to read issue 48? Click Here!

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Printing Industry News Digest April 16, 2011

Welcome to Printing Industry News Digest (PIND) issue 48, the summary of major news stories from the printing, packaging, digital and communication sectors. Welcome to the latest edition of PIND, incorporating brief summaries and links to the week’s key news stories so that you can look up that all important detail.

Paywalls and publishing: we take a look at the latest news and views. It would certainly seem too early to make too many assumptions about the New York Times and its paywall activity, though the guys at Mashable seem keen to make some early comment – a 99 cents offer is not going to give totally accurate numbers, but visitor figures are certainly down already.

Paywalls should certainly have an effect on a publications social media strategy. Mashable again makes some comment on this topic. Taking a wider view, the team at Gigacom present some interesting numbers on how the market is changing for newspapers with the growing adoption of the smartphone and the tablet computer.

Scarily, however, the Guardian offers us some numbers detailing what tablets are being used for and games top the list, following by browser searching and emailing. Another similar offering tells us 29 statistics of how iPad is changing our lives.

Our printing slant this week focuses on a very neat little write-up that offers a good guide to typography, including definitions of many of those bits of terminology that designers and pre-press folk use on a regular basis. It’s a handy guide to have to hand if you are new the world of ligatures, ampersands and letter spacing.

We’ve written quite a bit about the wonders of QR codes and how they might help to link the worlds of print and the internet. Well, already the world is moving forward. This latest offering from Aurasma details a forthcoming app that will be able to link any regularly printed item to a web site. OK, as is pointed out in the some of the comments re this story, the idea is embryonic t this point, but you can see where it is going.

Mashable offers something for computer users looking for productive PC solutions. A selection of desktop apps are offered here to speed up your day-to-day working life.

If you are a home-based worker, TNW offers seven top tips to help you be more productive, including goal setting. It also offers a focus on that wonderful saying about being busy not equating to being effective: basically, any fool can be busy; you have to use the time effectively to be productive!

Finally, do keep checking back to see what will be featured in our next edition, PIND 49. Details of new stories will be added to this link during the course of the week.

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Want to read issue 47? Click Here!

Saturday, April 09, 2011

Printing Industry News Digest April 9, 2011

Welcome to Printing Industry News Digest (PIND) issue 47, the summary of major news stories from the printing, packaging, digital and communication sectors. Welcome to the latest edition of PIND, incorporating brief summaries and links to the week’s key news stories so that you can look up that all important detail. We’ve shifted to a Saturday publication date: due to the general workload here at PIND-towers most of it is now written on a Saturday!

Firstly, blowing our own trumpet briefly, we are now one year old! A rousing chorus of Happy Birthday will do nicely, thank you. It would seem a reasonable time to ask what has happened during the last 12 months within the various sectors that we regularly examine, and where are we right now, so that is what we intend to do:

Print: We read with great interest earlier this week that the US print industry is beginning something of a fight back. OK, it’s starting from a pretty low point, according to the information provided by What They Think?, but the sequence of positively profitable quarters has to be seen as a step in the right direction. Hopefully this is just the beginning of a continuing upward slant?! In the UK business is improving; finance is still something of a stumbling block, unless you are presenting a good business plan – actually that’s what most businesses have to do! The Ryobi SRA1 format 920 Series presses are tipped for great things – 8pp to view with a B2 press footprint.

Packaging: Where print meets packaging in carton production, the leaders of the pack, such as Benson Group, appear to be going from strength to strength. For others who have been focused on sweating existing assets rather than investing in the latest and greatest kit, times have proven just as tough as the regular commercial print sector, with businesses falling by the wayside on a regular basis. May’s interpack show in Dusseldorf will be a highlight for this year.

Publishing: How many people have actually subscribed to The Daily: they are not saying apparently. I was very enthused by the whole marketing activity for this publication initially, and half of me thought that this might actually work. The other half of me thought “hold on – this can’t be right”. How can you charge for something that is generally available for free! The Times is still trying, the FT is refusing to pass subscriber detail to Apple, and the New York Times is trying – they can’t all make money from something that this easily available for nothing . . . can they?

Tablets: some interesting recent comments on the tablet market have suggested that Microsoft is trying to suggest that the iPad represents a passing fad. We do not believe that for one minute. More akin to our way of thinking is a summary of a recent talk from Steve Wozniak, who is saying that tablets are the ultimate computing machine that was just waiting to be developed. This market is going to go from strength to strength in our opinion. It is convenience computing: easy to move around with, easy to use. The Telegraph also offers us five alternative tablets to the iPad. Mind you, Apple is buying up all the remaining touch screen stock by the look of it!

Tablet/smartphone: OK, this is both bits together! The question is, which has impacted your life more: iPad or smartphone? Overall, I would have to go with the smartphone. It has moved an existing product into a whole new market, and is accessible by many millions of people. The tablet is still that bit more of a luxury item that doesn’t really do anything significantly different from a computer – it just does it in a more portable and convenient way. You might also argue that the iPad does nothing more than a smartphone, it just does it with a larger screen, making regular use more comfortable on the eye. The combined use of iOS is still outpacing Android when it comes to overall web use.

Smartphones: It is no great surprise to us here at PIND, but several recent reviews of the smartphone market have indicated that Android has, or very soon will, overtake the iPhone in terms of numbers. It’s bound to happen. We still don’t believe that any Android phone provides a superior product experience, but it all comes down to price generally. More people can afford an Android solution. Apple meanwhile continues to develop and continue to file patents.

The web: Speed, speed and more speed. Speed is still everything with the web. Mozilla this week published a list of the 50 slowest to load add-ons; Mashable offered us an infographic on why web sites are slow; and BT announced a 20mbps copper cable for the UK – well, for 80% of UK homes anyway. They are currently upgrading some 30,000 line per week (just not ours as yet!).

Social media: Google continues to refine its YouTube offering with Channels. Check out the new GenesisNews channel while you are at it! A report from this week also tells us that 90% of marketers believe that social media is important. What are the other 10% doing? We told you recently about the 100 millionth LinkedIn member; well this week there is a great infographic that tries very hard to put that into perspective.

Finally, do keep checking back to see what will be featured in our next edition, PIND 48. Details of new stories will be added to this text page during the course of the week.

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Want to read issue 46? Click Here!

Sunday, April 03, 2011

Printing Industry News Digest April 2, 2011

Welcome to Printing Industry News Digest (PIND) issue 46, the summary of major news stories from the printing, packaging, digital and communication sectors. Welcome to the latest edition of PIND, incorporating brief summaries and links to the week’s key news stories so that you can look up that all important detail. We’ve shifted to Saturday publication now, partly because Friday was April 1, and you wouldn’t believe a word that we had written, and secondly because, due to the workload at PIND-towers, most of it is now written on a Saturday anyway!

Phones are not actually something that we generally major on in PIND, with the exception of the occastional iPhone comment perhaps. Maybe this week we should address that shortfall, particularly in the light of there now being some 4 billion mobile users worldwide, over a quarter of which are now believed to be smartphone users. Three-quarters of the total are SMS enabled, which in itself opens the marketing mind more than a little. This splendid infographic gives you a great overview of where we are right now, and a few insights into the future too.

We are generally led to believe that iOS 5 is just around the corner. The chaps at MobileCrunch have offered there list of ten items that “simply need to be in iOS 5” (in their opinion). There are a couple that we are especially keen to see happen: proper Gmail support and something to make the lockscreen work a bit harder.

Fast Company have offered us a posting on iPhone hardware, highlighting a crop of patents recently filed. These included ideas for 3D photos and battery back-up packs. The chaps at Mashable have also provided a summary of iPhone 5 rumours, via a most impressive infographic which is certainly worth a peek a the very least.

In the meantime, RIM is talking about OS6.1 for BlackBerry, and promising a spring release.

Taking a neat side step into tablet talk one new device from Acer really took our eye, though you may want to bracket it into laptop rather than slate: the Iconia offers a dual-screen laptop running Windows 7. The screens are multi-touch and 14-inches. Whatever you call it, it’s a nice looking item.

One especially interesting piece of tablet talk:  Microsoft says that tablets are just a passing fad. This blog post draws parallels with IBM when it was simply known as Big Blue.

On a simple and more straightforward printing note, we liked this posting detailing 100 awesome and original business card designs. Whilst we have highlighted here in the past some excellent ideas surrounding electronic business cards, there really is nothing like a piece of printed work to carry in your pocket. It’s just so easy to hand somebody a card with all of your contact details. Some of these designs will knock your socks off too!

Print buying is the focus of Matthew Parker, and you will certainly enjoy his thoughts from PrintWeek regarding five strategies for print buyers to survive in a changing world. These are well worth reading and digesting.

Print will certainly be the focus of attendees and exhibitors at this week’s Apex Open House taking place in Hemel Hempstead, UK. Products from ECRM, Ryobi, Screen, Morgana, Tharstern, Kocher + Beck, MGI, Friedheim International, Horizon and others, with be on show on both Tuesday and Wednesday, April 5 and 6. Of special interest will be the ECRM DPP1200 digital printing device. Whilst some observers have suggested that this is purely a re-badged OKI printer, PIND information suggests that there is more to this device than that. Come see and check it out for yourself.

Also of great interest on the UK equipment front is the news that M Partners have taken on the agency for Mabeg offline inspection systems. The company see these products as yet another niche solution for print businesses in both the UK and Ireland.

Whilst you might have read some of our recent reports regarding publishers divesting themselves of titles, and moving many others to iPad, it was exciting this week to see Hearst finalising the purchase of titles such as the international rights to Elle magazine.

Finally, do keep checking back to see what will be featured in our next edition, PIND 47. Details of new stories will be added to this text page during the course of the week, and it will also be our FIRST ANNIVERSARY edition! Yes, one whole year since we decided to commit some of these thoughts to a blog site!

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Want to read issue 45? Click Here!