home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Ian & Stuart's Australian Mac: Not for Sale
/
Another.not.for.sale (Australia).iso
/
hold me in your arms
/
wired
/
Guidelines-for-Writers.wired
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-09-24
|
3KB
|
80 lines
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
=-=-=-=-=Copyright 1993,4 Wired Ventures, Ltd. All Rights Reserved-=-=-=-=
-=-=For complete copyright information, please see the end of this file=-=-
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
WIRED Submission Guidelines
***************************
The purpose of Wired is to illuminate the roots, issues and possible
destiny of the emerging digital culture. If you want to write for us,
here are some things to keep in mind:
>Amaze us.
>We know a lot about digital computers and we are bored with them.
Tell us something about them we've never heard before, in a way we've
never seen before. If it challenges our assumptions, so much the
better. Wired is a multimedia event on paper. Fiction, non-fiction,
semi-fiction; essay, how-to, expose; picture story, profile, interview
-- all in one issue.
>We seek young and new voices -- voices that are passionate and involved.
>Events drive the news of television and newspapers. *Ideas* --
conceptual reporting -- drive the news in Wired. It shouldn't matter
too much if someone rereads your piece next month or next year. Poet
Ezra Pound calls this kind of information "news that stays news."
It's rare. We'll go out of our way to find it and publish it.
>If you care deeply about something that's inextricably tied to
digital technologies, chances are we cover it. If the topic is just
cresting the digital horizon, it's perfect.
>Write it well -- long, if the material demands. Take chances.
Sweep, color, scene, and strong character anecdotes are imperative.
If there's no conflict -- moral, institutional, cultural -- there's no
story.
>The piece must be definitive.
>We are re-inventing paper as a communication tool for the digital
era. Send us an example of what a re-invented magazine article would
be like.
>We don't want anything that duplicates what you can read elsewhere.
>We print complaints.
>How to review a product, book, or item: Write your review. Then
write us a letter explaining why we should devote space to your item.
Throw away your review and send us the letter.
>Give it to us in digital, or analog form. We'd prefer you send it on
Mac diskette, Word ready. Don't send us the only copy of anything.
Via E-Mail - send it to (submissions@wired.com). If it's a long piece,
(over 7500 words) we'd prefer you first send an under-300 word
synopsis of what it's about.
Thanks for your interest in Wired.
* * *
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=WIRED Online Copyright Notice=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Copyright 1993,4 Wired Ventures, Ltd. All rights reserved.
This article may be redistributed provided that the article and this
notice remain intact. This article may not under any circumstances
be resold or redistributed for compensation of any kind without prior
written permission from Wired Ventures, Ltd.
If you have any questions about these terms, or would like information
about licensing materials from WIRED Online, please contact us via
telephone (+1 (415) 904 0660) or email (info@wired.com).
WIRED and WIRED Online are trademarks of Wired Ventures, Ltd.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=