Forget Kindle, CellStories Has Free Short Stories for Your Phone
Aspiring authors, take note. In response to the popularity of Amazon's Kindle and the Sony Reader, a journalism professor from Chicago's Columbia College decided that books on the Net might help out the little guy, too. "Thankfully, the death of print meant discovering something much more valuable: mobile publishing," Professor Dan Sinker wrote on his site, CellStories.net. Sinker (who also, when he was 19, founded the seminal underground zine Punk Planet) told Reuters he thinks it's "delusional" to believe that the Kindle will still be around in three years. With the iPhone and other smartphones becoming the all-in-one gadgets, instead of just players and phones, users are going to want their reading to mesh seamlessly, as well. But iPhone screens are small, so Sinker thinks small screens work best for, well, small stories.
Sinker launched CellStories earlier this week, as a mobile-friendly, cross-platform site that lets Web-enabled phones read a daily story. An amazingly simple interface allows a short piece of writing, usually around 1,500 to 2,000 words, to load on screen quickly, and then refreshes with a new story the next day. Best of all, CellStories is free, and, while it isn't an application, Sinker has said that he's interested in pairing with publishers in the future. In the mean time, most stories are user-submitted.
The increasingly mobile world is giving power to anyone that has a server and a Web address, letting Sinker and Co. receive submissions and select great content for readers to peruse. Furthermore, nothing fits into an on-the-go, intelligent lifestyle like a thoughtful short story, perfect for the train ride home from work. Virtual 'book' club, anyone? [From: Reuters]

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