![]() ![]() |
|
|
|
|
Index Interviews: Tom Parker Articles: Basic Copyright Concepts for Writers Beginner -- Don't Write That Novel! "Dulce Et Decorum Est"-A Literary Writer's Point of View "Dulce Et Decorum Est"-A Dramatist's Point of View Editorial Spotlight On...OMNI Magazine Book Review: Writer's Guide to Magazine Editors and Publishers Upcoming Events Calendar Results From Last Month's Reader Poll: On-line or Online? Reader Mail Return to This Issue's Index Return to Homepage Subscribe
|
|
Spotlight On... OMNI MagazineThis month's Spotlight is on OMNI Magazine, the first slick print magazine to go exclusively electronic. Since its start offline in 1978,
Why did OMNI go online? "We had already started making the move to electronic publication with our aol site and the internet site.
"We are trying to recreate the OMNI of the beginning, taking what we can of print and adding as much interactivity as possible. In the nonfiction area this means edgy and entertaining science. And for my area, the fiction we want to become the hub for the sf, fantasy, and horror comunity on the net. We're having a great time with the medium and as we learn more about the Web, the site evolves. We're in the middle of a fiction redesign from top to bottom that we hope will be up by early-mid September." OMNI has a wealth of content to offer its readers. One of its most popular features over the years has been the IQ Tests that it has offered its readers. Now, with the help of Virtual Entertainment, OMNI offers readers a chance to test their abilities including verbal, numerical, inductive reasoning in an interactive format. In addition to the award-winning fiction which graces OMNI's pages, OMNI readers have the opportunity to learn about the latest trends and happenings in the scientific world, read interviews with the leading lights in scientific fields and explore current social issues in a depth and breadth not possible in the traditional, non-interactive print format.
The change from print to online has allowed OMNI to explore these interactive options on the Web. Ellen elaborates: "We're doing more interactive material on the Web--fiction and nonfiction: Live Science, which provides on the spot reports from laboratories and research centers, a fiction round-robin, during which four writers post their additions to an ongoing story over a period of a month." "We've been running a series of round-robins with four professional writers creating a short story online for a period of a month with a bulletin board for comments from the "audience." The first was by Jim Patrick Kelly, Rachel Pollack,Pat Cadigan, and Nancy Kress. The second was by Maureen McHugh, Karen Joy Fowler, Terry Bisson, and Rosaleen Love.
"We've been publishing new fiction by James P. Blaylock. Cherry Wilder, Robert Silverberg, Simon Ings, Michael Bishop, Brian Stableford, Howard Waldrop, and Michael Kandel" We asked Ellen to give us a hint or two about the new fiction redesign. "We're trying to make the graphics smaller, in bits and pieces rather in large gifs, so that all the pages will load quicker.
On the subject of making money on the Web, Ellen said, "We don't sell subscriptions. The only way we can survive is by advertising or sponsorships. It's a new medium and the web society is still trying to figure out how to make money." What are the latest trends you see in your genre? "Clone stories in sf, torture and mutilation in horror."
"No SASE. Writers who obviously have not read the guidelines or asked around as to how to professionally submit a mss." And the future plans for OMNI? "We are trying to recreate the OMNI of the beginning, taking what we can of print and adding as much interactivity as possible. In the nonfiction area this means edgy and entertaining science. And for my area, the fiction department, we want to become the hub for the sci-fi, fantasy, and horror comunity on the Net." OMNI Magazine can be found online at http://www.omnimag.com. |