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beth gourley

How the E-Book Will Change the Way We Read and Write - WSJ.com - 0 views

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    Stephen Johnson on how he had an 'aha' moment with the Kindle and what he thinks is coming...
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    summary of different methods and formats required for ebooks.
beth gourley

Single Purpose E-Book Readers are Dead - Tennant: Digital Libraries - Blog on Library J... - 0 views

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    Summary from Tennant emphasizing that the public does not want to pay for a single purpose ebook reader.
Librareanne @diigo

iMinds - General Knowledge for our Lifestyle and Devices - 1 views

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    iMinds offers 8-minute AudioBooks and eBook articles that deliver bursts of knowledge on an array of topics through iPods, eReaders and other technology.
Katie Day

COPIA - a social reading site - 0 views

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    a social networking site where you can buy ebooks and get into online reading groups
beth gourley

Does the Brain Like E-Books? - Room for Debate Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    5 authors present their opinion on whether the brain likes ebooks by suggesting whether it depends on discipline towards distractions, how the reading practice is shaped, the focus is on the words or whether ereading opens up a more social experience. But ultimately is one able to experience "deep reading."
Katie Day

Giles Slade: Eebs: A History of Future Publishing - 0 views

  • The Kindle, on the other hand, is what you keep at home or take with you on vacation to relax into. It is for the book-lover who might occasionally buy a first, a signed or a special edition. It is lingerie. It is a box of chocolates or a bottle of double-malt. Especially well-timed for the recession as a luxury item that keeps on giving by allowing you to 'save' on cheaper electronic editions, it's now here to stay
  • According to the current growth curve, electronic books will dominate world-wide book sales by 2018. (This is the book industry's own prediction, and is extremely 'safe.' It does not anticipate a watershed or 'tipping point').
  • What I want to see is an e-Book that is no longer a simulacrum of a printed work. Soon, when people begin writing exclusively for eBooks, book metaphors like pagination will lose their functionality and fall away. But I also want the new medium to develop brand new possibilities. Maybe then, we will stop calling them e-Books and simply call them 'eebs.'
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  • The Kindle feature of reading itself aloud is a good beginning in expanding this new medium. In the future, I foresee hyperlinks that will break the reader out of the printed page and take him or her on a roller-coaster ride across the Internet during an accelerated and compressed 'knowledge-journey' [nahjer?] that would be impossible in a printed work. I don't know how long this will take, but I know it has to come.
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Librareanne @diigo

Libraries check out the eBook | Project Gutenberg News Portal - 1 views

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    Downloading a book in the comfort of home is no longer just a concept for most. It's a daily reality. For libraries, it is still a relatively new venture, riddled with many obstacles, but even more opportunities.
Katie Day

The Future of Reading - 11/1/2009 - Library Journal - 0 views

  • Clearly something important and fundamental is happening to books and reading. Libraries need to be part of this reading revolution, supporting and defending the rights of digital readers, experimenting with new reader services, collecting new genres and media formats, and providing access for all readers to the devices, networks, content, and online communities that will continue to emerge.
  • To that end, I suggest that libraries and library associations develop, promulgate, and defend a Reader Bill of Rights for the Digital Era. Here are a few draft planks: • The reader should be empowered and able to control the mode of reading on his or her e-reading appliance of choice. Specifically, a TTS feature should be available for all books. TTS is not an audio performance. It enables auditory reading, a mode of reading gaining in popularity. Readers should be able to switch quickly from visual to auditory or tactile reading and back, with olfactory and gustatory options if/when they are developed. • The reader should be empowered and able to control the presentation aspects of the ebook. For visual reading, this includes factors such as font size, font type, font color, and background color. For TTS audiobooks, this includes factors such as a male or female voice, playback speed (sans Alvin and the Chipmunks), choice of accents (e.g., British, Australian, American Midwest, American Southern for English), with similar accent choices for other languages. • Readers, individually and in groups, have the right to add to and embellish a text, as long as the embellishments (e.g., notes, highlighting, marginalia, new characters, new episodes) are clearly distinguishable from the primary text. • The reader has a right to save and share these embellishments, or keep them private.
  • Librarians should encourage—nay, aid and abet—experimentation in reading. We need to cleave to the needs and wants of readers. We must continue to study their reading habits, then design and redesign our content collections, systems, and services to help them improve and maximize their reading experiences. We are in a long-term commitment with readers.
Katie Day

Kirkus Reviews - iPad Apps | Kirkus Book Reviews - 1 views

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    for children / YA
Librareanne @diigo

Digital Revolution Shakes Foundations of Book Retailing - WSJ.com - 0 views

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    "The digital revolution sweeping the media world is rewriting the rules of the book industry, upending the established players which have dominated for decades."
Librareanne @diigo

2010: The Only Year of the E-Reader | Fast Company - 1 views

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    The Kindle is looking almost lost now among the flurry of new e-book reading devices just released or due soon. So many are out, in fact, that 2010 is really the year of the e-reader. But only 2010. Because e-readers are doomed.
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