L'espace presse Short Édition

03/08/2022

[US] Short Story Dispenser

Image de www.eugene-or.gov
Image de [US] Short Story Dispenser

Short Story Dispenser

Travelers flying through Eugene Airport can now pick up free reading at a new short story dispenser provided in a partnership between the Airport, Eugene Public Library and Eugene Public Library Foundation.
People of all ages can use a touch-free button to choose Local, International, or For Kids options, then receive a free short story or poem printed on demand like a receipt using ink-free recycled paper. 

14/06/2022

[US] BART short story program proving to be a success

Image de www.cbsnews.com

BAY AREA - For the past year and a half, BART has actively worked to convert its ridership into a readership with a free in-station short story dispensing system at a handful of stations.

Launched in January 2021, the Short Story Dispenser kiosks have delivered 17,198 short stories to riders at the Richmond, Fruitvale, Balboa Park and Pleasant Hill stations, according to BART officials.

The stories are written to be read within one, three or five minutes and are printed by the no-touch kiosks on recyclable paper, BART officials said in a news release Monday.

"What pushed us to really move this project forward is that the Bay Area has such a wealth of bookstores, readers and writers," said BART Art Program Manager Jennifer Easton.

13/06/2022

Le Cub'Édito, distributeur d'histoires mobile et personnalisable

Image de actualitte.com
Image de Le Cub'Édito, distributeur d'histoires mobile et personnalisable

Nouveau au CDI, le Cub'Edito pour découvrir des lectures courtes à imprimer

Cube de 32 centimètres de côté pour un poids de 6 à 7 kilos, le Cub'Édito se présente comme une version miniaturisée de la borne bien connue de Short Édition. 
« Sa conception a démarré juste après le premier confinement, en 2020, pour répondre aux nombreuses demandes de miniaturisation du dispositif », nous explique Kévin Barbier, responsable du développement commercial au sein de la maison.

09/06/2022

[US] San Francisco transit dispenses short stories to commuters

Image de www.npr.org

San Francisco's transit system hopes short stories printed on receipts for riders will benefit both commuters and creative writers.

Do you ever get to the train station and realize you forgot to bring something to read? Yes, we all have our phones, but many of us still like to go old school and read something printed.

Well, there's a kiosk for that. In the San Francisco Bay Area, at least.

09/06/2022

[US] National Ambassador Jason Reynolds Returns to In-Person Visits

Image de www.publishersweekly.com
Image de [US] National Ambassador Jason Reynolds Returns to In-Person Visits

Reynolds demonstrated how to use the Short Story Cube at Dutton/Brady Junior High and High School in Dutton on May 24.

For the first time since the pandemic started, author Jason Reynolds took to the road for his first in-person tour in his role as the National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature, a program of the Library of Congress and Every Child a Reader.
Reynolds has held the position since 2020, and he headed to Montana last month to restart his in-person school visits. The tour, under Reynolds’s Grab the Mic: Tell Your Story platform, was in collaboration with digital publisher Short Edition to provide Short Story Cubes, devices that allow students to create, edit, and print stories of their own making. We’ve gathered a selection of photos from the events.

02/06/2022

[US] SEPTA stations get makeover for reading campaign

Image de metrophiladelphia.com
Image de [US] SEPTA stations get makeover for reading campaign

Manoj Simha reads a short story distributed by a newly established kiosk at SEPTA’s Tasker-Morris station. Jack Tomczuk

Underground, at the Broad Street Line’s Tasker-Morris station in South Philadelphia, there’s now a mini-library. Riders, by placing their hand over touchless buttons, can now get free short stories, printed on store receipt-like paper. Many of the tales were written by local students.

The kiosks, which are also at the BSL’s Erie station, are part of a campaign unveiled Wednesday to engage kids and families taking SEPTA — and, ultimately, to boost literacy levels among the city’s children.

01/06/2022

San Francisco BART wants to get riders back with short stories

Image de www.optimistdaily.com

Many of us have whiled away the minutes on a bus or a train with a book. Now the Bay Area Rapid Transit District, the public transportation authority of San Francisco, is looking to attract riders back to public transportation by distributing short stories at select stations. 

23/05/2022

[US] A Train Trip With A Story on the Side

Image de www.bloomberg.com
Image de [US] A Train Trip With A Story on the Side

Short Story Dispenser at Pleasant Hill BART Station. Photographer: Maria Avila/BART

In unassuming corners of metro and train stations in cities all over the world, beyond the ticket machines and behind the throngs of people, there are vending machines that spit out stories. Even though I’ve apparently walked past one of the short story dispensers installed in four Bay Area Rapid Transit stations several times, I never knew they existed – until last week. 

23/05/2022

Un cube à histoires courtes à St Genis Laval

Image de www.leprogres.fr
Image de Un cube à histoires courtes à St Genis Laval

Stéphane Colson devant le Cub’Edito. Photo Progrès /Dominique CHENE

Qu’est ce que le Cub' Édito ?
« C’est un distributeur d’histoires courtes, transportable, qui permet aux collégiens d’imprimer une œuvre courte sur un papier recyclable à partir de collections de Short Edition, éditeur et créateur grenoblois du Cub' Édito.

22/05/2022

San Francisco transit kiosks dispense short stories, launch story contest

Image de www.kioskmarketplace.com
Image de San Francisco transit kiosks dispense short stories, launch story contest

Image courtesy of the Bay Area Rapid Transit.

Rapid transit riders with a literary bent in San Francisco can compete for a $200 honorarium and the chance to have their stories dispensed in the system's kiosks, according to a press release.
The Bay Area Rapid Transit, which offers riders short stories dispensed from dispensers at certain transit stations, has called for entries for its first short story fiction contest, called "BART Lines," in celebration of the transit system's 50th anniversary.

18/05/2022

[US] Your BART story: Transit agency solicits literary works to boost ridership

Image de www.sfchronicle.com
Image de [US] Your BART story: Transit agency solicits literary works to boost ridership

The Short Édition fiction dispensers print out stories that take one, three or five minutes to read. Courtesy BART / BART

In an attempt to regain attention after a pandemic ridership drop, BART is willing to try anything — including commissioning new literary works.

The transit agency has started soliciting entries for a short fiction contest, the finalists of which will be available via story dispensers on BART platforms to be printed and read during a train ride home.

“(People) don’t think about BART and art. We’re trying to change that,” said BART Chief Communications Officer Alicia Trost. “So many transit systems across the world have beautiful art, and we’re trying to find ways we can afford right now to bring art in the stations.

18/05/2022

Lyon : une boîte à histoires courtes pour inciter les collégiens à la lecture

Image de www.lyonmag.com
Image de Lyon : une boîte à histoires courtes pour inciter les collégiens à la lecture

élèves du collège Professeur dargent et Philippe Carrière - Lyon Mag

Cub’Edito c’est une boîte à histoires créée par le dispositif Short Edition, l’éditeur propulseur de littérature courte. Le principe est simple, les élèves rédigent des histoires courtes corrigées par les enseignants sur une plateforme numérique. Les histoires sont ensuite envoyées dans le Cub’Edito sur lequel se trouve 2 boutons qui permettent d’imprimer les créations. "L’élève se retrouve en position d’auteur, il n’écrit pas pour une note mais pour que ses camarades lisent sa création et le professeur prend la place d’éditeur", explique Christophe Sibieude, co-fondateur de Short Edition. "Pour faire lire, faire écrire peut être une superbe porte d’entrée", ajoute-t-il.