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How India's smartphone revolution is creating a new generation of readers and writers

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    Look all around you.
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    Whether you're in a subway, a park,
    an airport, a restaurant,
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    even at this conference,
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    all of you have a phone in your hands
    or maybe in your pockets.
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    How many of you have a book?
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    Very few, right?
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    This is the sight that used to greet me
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    every time I walked out
    of my office block.
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    I was surrounded by a sea
    of 20-something professionals
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    glued to their phones.
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    And not a single one
    had a book in their hands.
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    And this used to make me
    very, very frustrated.
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    I was a bookworm all my life.
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    Books formed the milestones of my life.
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    The first man I fell
    in love with was Mr. Darcy.
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    I first read "Harry Potter" when I was 21,
    on a summer break from college.
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    And I remember the first night I spent
    in a little flat I bought in my mid-20s,
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    very proudly,
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    and I spent the whole night
    reading "The Da Vinci Code."
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    And then I'm going to make
    a terrible confession:
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    even today, when I'm low,
    I get into bed with "War and Peace."
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    Don't laugh.
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    (Laughter)
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    But I was also like all those
    people I saw around me:
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    I, too, lived on my phone.
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    I ordered my groceries online,
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    and soon my app knew
    that I needed a monthly dose of diapers.
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    I booked my cinemas on my phone.
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    I booked planes on my phone.
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    And when I did the long commute back home
    like most urban Indians,
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    and was stuck in traffic,
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    I passed the time on WhatsApp,
    video-chatting my twin.
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    I was part of an extraordinary revolution
    that was happening in India.
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    Indians are the second-largest
    users of smartphones in the world.
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    And data prices have been
    slashed so radically
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    that half of urban India
    and even a part of rural India
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    now have a smartphone
    with a data connection in their hands.
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    And if you know anything about India,
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    you'll know that "half" means,
    like, all of America or something.
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    You know, it's large numbers.
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    (Laughter)
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    And these numbers are just growing
    and growing and growing.
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    They're exploding.
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    And what they're doing
    is empowering Indians
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    in all kinds of extraordinary ways.
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    And yet, none of these changes
    that I was seeing around me
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    were reflected in my world,
    my world of books.
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    I live in a country the size of Europe,
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    and it only has 50 decent bookshops.
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    And Indians just didn't seem
    to want to read for fun.
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    So if you look at all
    the best-seller lists in India,
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    what you'll always find
    in the best-seller list
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    is exam and professional guides.
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    Imagine if you found the SAT guides
    as the "New York Times" number one seller,
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    month after month.
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    And yet, the smartphone revolution
    was creating readers and writers
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    of a different kind.
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    Whether it was on Facebook or WhatsApp,
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    Indians were writing and sharing
    and reading all kinds of things:
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    terrible jokes, spurious pop history,
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    long, emotional confessions,
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    diatribes against the government.
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    And as I read and shared these things,
    I wondered to myself,
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    "Could I get these writers
    and these readers,
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    could I turn them into my readers?"
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    And so I left my plush corner office
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    and my job as the publisher
    of India's top publishing company,
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    and I set up on my own.
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    I moved into a single large room
    in a cheap bohemian district of Delhi,
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    with a small team.
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    And there, I set up
    a new kind of publishing house.
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    A new kind of publishing house
    needs a new kind of reader
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    and a new kind of book.
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    And so I asked myself,
    "What would this new reader want?
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    Would they prize urgency, relevance,
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    timeliness, directness --
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    the very qualities they seem to want
    from their online services,
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    indeed, the qualities they seem
    to want from life today?"
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    I knew that my readers
    were always on the go.
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    I'd have to fit into
    their lifestyle and schedules.
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    Would they actually want to read
    a 200-page book?
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    Or would they want something
    a little bit more digestible?
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    Indians are incredibly value-conscious,
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    especially when it comes
    to their online reading.
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    I knew I had to give them
    books under a dollar.
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    And so my company was formed,
    and it was born.
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    It was a platform where we created a list
    of stories designed for the smartphone,
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    but it also allowed amateur writers
    to upload their own stories,
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    so they could be showcased
    along with the very writers
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    they read and admired.
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    And we could also enter into
    other people's digital platforms.
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    So, imagine this:
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    imagine you're a receptionist,
    you've had a long day at work,
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    you book your cab
    in your ride-hailing app,
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    it shows up,
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    and you get into your car,
    and you lie back on your seat,
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    and you put on your app.
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    And you find a set of stories
    waiting for you, timed to your journey.
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    Imagine you're a gay young woman,
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    in a relatively conservative city
    like Lucknow, which lies near Delhi.
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    There's no way your parents
    know about your sexuality.
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    They'd completely freak out.
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    Would you like lesbian love stories
    written in Hindi, priced under a dollar,
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    to be read in the privacy of your phone?
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    And could I match readers
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    to the events that were taking place
    around them in real time?
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    So we published biographies
    of very famous politicians
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    after they won big elections.
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    When the supreme court
    decriminalized homosexuality,
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    an LGBTQ collection was waiting
    on our home page.
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    And when India's Toni Morrison,
    the great writer Mahasweta Devi died,
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    our readers found a short story by her
    as soon as news hit.
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    The idea was to be relevant
    to every moment of a reader's life.
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    Who are our readers?
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    They're mostly young men
    under the age of 30.
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    There's someone like Salil,
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    who lives in a city where
    there isn't a modern bookshop.
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    And he comes to our app almost every day.
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    There's someone like Manoj,
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    who mostly reads us
    during the long commute back home.
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    And there's someone like Ahmed,
    who loves our nonfiction
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    that he can read in a single sitting,
    and that's priced very low.
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    Imagine if you're like a young, techie boy
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    in India's Silicon Valley
    city of Bangalore.
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    And one day, you get
    an in-app notification
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    and it says that your favorite actress
    has written a sexy short story
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    and it's waiting for you.
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    That's how we launched Juggernaut.
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    We got a very famous ex-adult star,
    called Sunny Leone.
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    She's India's most Googled
    person, as it happens.
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    And we got her to write us
    a collection of sexy short stories
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    that we published every night for a week.
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    And it was a sensation.
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    I mean, no one could believe
    that we'd asked Sunny Leone to write.
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    But she did,
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    and she proved everyone wrong,
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    and she found this immense readership.
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    And just as we've redefined
    what a book is and how a reader behaves,
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    we're rethinking who an author is.
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    In our amateur writing platform,
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    we have writers that range
    from teenagers to housewives.
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    And they're writing all kinds of things.
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    It starts as small as a poem,
    an essay, a single short story ...
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    Fifty percent of them are returning
    to the app to write again.
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    Take someone like Neeraj.
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    He's a middle-aged executive,
    wife, two kids, a good job.
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    And Neeraj loves to read.
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    But every time Neeraj read
    a book that he loved,
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    he was also filled with regret.
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    He wondered to himself
    if he could write, too.
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    He was convinced
    he had stories in his mind.
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    But time and real life had happened,
    and he couldn't really manage it.
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    And then he heard about
    the Juggernaut writer's platform.
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    And what he loved about it
    was that he felt this was a place
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    where he could stand
    head and shoulders, equally,
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    with the very writers
    that he most admired.
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    And so he began to write.
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    And he snatched
    a minute here, an hour there,
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    in between flights in airports,
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    late at night, when he had
    a little bit of time on his hands.
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    And he wrote this
    extraordinary story for us.
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    He wrote a story
    about a family of assassins
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    who lived in the winding
    lanes of Old Delhi.
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    We loved it, it was so fresh and original.
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    And before Neeraj knew it,
    he'd not only scored a film deal
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    but also a second contract
    to write another story.
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    Neeraj's story is one of the most read
    stories on our app.
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    My journey is very, very young.
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    We're a two-year-old company,
    and we have a long way to go.
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    But we already, and we will
    by the end of this year,
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    have about half a million stories,
    many priced at under a dollar.
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    Most of our readers love reading
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    and trying out authors
    they've never, ever heard of before.
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    Thirty percent of our home page reads
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    comes out of the writing
    that comes from our writer's platform.
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    By being everywhere,
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    by being accessible and relevant,
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    I hope to make reading a daily habit,
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    as easy and effortless
    as checking your email,
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    as booking a ticket online
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    or ordering your groceries.
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    And as for me,
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    I've discovered that as I entered
    the six-inch world of the smartphone,
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    my own world just got very, very big.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How India's smartphone revolution is creating a new generation of readers and writers
Speaker:
Chiki Sarkar
Description:

India has the second largest population of any country in the world -- yet it has only 50 decent bookstores, says publisher Chiki Sarkar. So she asked herself: How do we get more people reading books? Find out how Sarkar is tapping into India's smartphone revolution to create a new generation of readers and writers in this fun talk about a fresh kind of storytelling.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
10:06

English subtitles

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