07-11-2018
[US] From awww to awesome
Once upon a time, a kiosk dreamed of delivering something more exciting than tickets.
07-11-2018
Once upon a time, a kiosk dreamed of delivering something more exciting than tickets.
04-16-2018
A customer at Cafe Zoetrope in San Francisco reading one of the short stories doled out by Short Edition’s story dispenser.Credit...Olivier Alexandre/Short Edition
Stories are shared many ways. They are recounted in books and magazines. They are read aloud around the campfire at night. They are randomly dispensed from stand-alone kiosks, doled out on strips of paper like grocery store receipts. Wait, what was that last one? Leave it to the French, with their love of Voltaire and Simone de Beauvoir, to revive literature in the era of hot takes, fast news and smartphone addiction.
04-06-2018
Francis Ford Coppola and the Short Story Dispenser
I loved the idea of a vending machine, a dispensing machine that doesn’t dispense potato chips or beer or coffee for money but gives you art. I especially liked the fact that you didn’t put money in. – Filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola
Thusly did filmmaker Coppola arrange for a free Short Edition story vending machine to be installed in Café Zoetrope, his San Francisco restaurant.
02-18-2018
A Short Story Dispenser at work.
The future of the publishing industry is, increasingly, virtual. This week, news broke that one of the final bastions of print publishers — Fortune 500 company Barnes and Noble, Inc. — has abruptly laid off 1,800 full-time employees. Amazon's dominance over the book world seems uncrackable, and everyone's e-readers can fit more books on them anyway. But one innovation has broken new ground for voracious readers who prefer their next story stay in the physical realm. The Short Story Dispenser, which made a splash last month at CES 2018
12-28-2017
12-27-2017
Short Story kiosk unveiled - Columbus has now a lovely way to get short stories into the hands of kids. Columbus City School says the Short Story Kiosks are the first in the midwest...
10-24-2017
Petits mots, mais gros succès: déjà près de 150 bornes installées, en France et dans le monde. Crédit O. Alexandre
Non, le papier n'est pas mort! Cette start-up grenobloise distribue gratuitement des histoires courtes dans les lieux publics. Vous avez cinq minutes à tuer ? Et pas tellement envie de tapoter sur votre smartphone ?
09-09-2017
Need something to read?
My morning or afternoon walk will usually take me over to the Copley/Prudential malls, which are only 10 minutes away from me. And every time I head into the Prudential side of the mall, I stop off at this thing that I discovered a few months ago...
10-04-2016
A short story vending machine in Grenoble
In a time where progression in every field of human endeavour involves ever smarter phones, virtual reality or colonising Mars, it is of some comfort to hear that a new innovation exciting people across the Channel involves none of the above.
07-10-2016
Don't have time to read any more? Residents in a town in southern France don't have that problem. Thanks to the startup website short-editions-dot-com 10,000 short story authors have been matched with a community of 150,000 regular readers with time to kill while waiting on line. David Turecamo explains an innovative technology.
01-26-2016
The Alpine city of Grenoble has scored a surprising hit with automatic dispensers that offer free printed short stories
A flight of the imagination is transforming one of the banes of French life — waiting for service in state offices — into an opportunity to immerse oneself in the written word. The Alpine city of Grenoble has scored a surprising hit with automatic dispensers that offer free printed short stories to citizens waiting for their bout with bureaucracy.
01-22-2016
The city of Grenoble, France, is testing the first models of a local startup’s short-story vending machine.Photograph by Pauline Bock
When Jess Mateychuk entered the tourism office in Grenoble, France, he wasn’t looking for information about the city. “I finally found them!” the twenty-one-year-old exchange student from Winnipeg, Canada, said with excitement. He was referring to the city’s recent cultural innovation turned Internet hit: a black and orange, rocket-looking cylinder that spits out short stories, free of charge.