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Laurie A.

Playing Catch-Up in E-Books - 0 views

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    Article looks at the ebooks business in Europe, where it is still in its infancy. Not many readers available, and very little content in other languages besides English. There are legal and economic issues for pricing and licensing of ebooks.
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    I was just going to add this here. I debated whether to cite it on one of my pages. They also mention the example of the music industry.
Laurie A.

Amazon to Sell the Kindle Reader at a Lower Price, but With Advertising Added - 1 views

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    From the article: "Still, books are one of the last ad-free zones, and by showing ads on an e-reader, Amazon risks alienating some users, he said. " Libraries too are one of the last ad-free zones.
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    They may try to release a tablet. "An Amazon tablet could tie together the seemingly disparate parts of the company's business, Mr. McQuivey said, including e-commerce, e-books, video and audio."
Laurie A.

Piecing Together Wallace's Posthumous Novel - 0 views

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    This article is on the editorial process of putting together David Foster Wallace's unfinished novel, which was several hundred pages of manuscript without a clear order. I thought this was interesting: ___ "It's my version of the novel," [Michael Pietsch, editor of the novel] admitted, adding that he talked to Little Brown's e-book staff about creating a version that would enable the reader to arrange the chapters in any order, but was told that was technically unfeasible. __ This is surprising to me - is the ebook form that inflexible? Or did the publisher not want to deal with the idea of so many versions circulating?
Anna Lisa Raya Rivera

What is a Vook? - 0 views

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    Like the etextbook story I just linked to, this video on "what is a vook?" shows how interactive ebooks can be. I'm not sure how I feel about all this functionality just yet. It makes sense for certain kinds of etextbooks, but I'm not sure if I want video to go with my "Pride & Prejudice."
beestel

E-books benefit Society - 0 views

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    I read this article detailing why e-books are better for the environment, cheaper, easier for eyes to read, convenient... My question is if anyone has an e-book reader and how they like it. I'm considering one of my own.
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    I received a Kindle as a gift, but I have not started using it. I guess I am very old-fashioned and I like the actual experience of having a paper copy in my hands. Occasionally I read text online, but it is nice to feel the paper in your hands. I agree that it is getting very important for all of us to start thinking about how much paper we use and how to be environmentally smarter. Also, I have to say that The Kindle is gentle on the eyes, much more than one would think.
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    I have very mixed feelings about ebooks. I am really excited that we will cover this for a week in this course. I just got an ipad from my parents as a going away gift, and I know it will be an essential tool in obtaining english language books overseas. They would have been too expensive otherwise (even my local ILL is 6Euros and up, depending where the book is). For me, there's no question that it is most efficient and economical distribution channel to get books. That said, I am wary of obsolescence, and very upset that most of these devices prohibit sharing. I am starting to get frustrated with the limits and controls on Apple products - it is my understanding that the Kindle is probably the most prohibitive though. Sharing great books with friends or through the library creates community and is better for the environment than plugging in more devices that use electricity. It's an interesting thing to play around with. The sony ereader isn't praised enough, I think. This device is the most open and programmable, and the most enabled to work with public libraries for elending. I ultimately did not get the ereader since I wanted a device with internet browsing so I could log in and do some of my classwork.
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    I have a Kindle and I LOVE it. I will admit that I hate that I cannot share my books with my friends as this is something that I used to do all the time. The Nook has that capability and there are rumors that Amazon will push through software that will allow this capability and I really hope they do. The Kindle has done amazing things for my book shelves and I think my husband is thrilled that we no longer have to keep adding. It is a dedicated ereader so it is limited to what I can do compared to an iPad but when I just want to read something the Kindle (or ereader) cannot be beat. While you are reading the iPad you are looking a computer monitor and that really strains my eyes. The Kindle is exactly like reading a book and there is no eye strain. Plus, the Kindle is a lot lighter than a book so it is much more comfortable to hold for long periods of time. It is great when I travel because I have a ton of books loaded onto my Kindle and I am set to go and I do not have to worry about their weight or carrying them around. Dessi mentioned that she liked having the old-fashioned paper in her hands and I thought I was going to be that way as well but I got over it real quick! I will admit that I do not like it for my school text books because I like to be able to visually see my books and I place notes all over the place with post-its and an old-fashioned book is just better for me in that respect.
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    They all seem to have advantages and disadvantges... I agree one problem with the ipad is the screen - it's better than a typical computer screen, but not as easy on the eyes as a dedicated e-reader. I am still attached to the physical experience of reading and writing, but that's cool that has really worked for Heather. One of the reasons why it might have not worked for scholarly reading is that the tools still seem limited for engaged reading, marking up texts, highlighting, etc. I am hoping there will be good apps for this with the ipad (i just got it and haven't had a chance to look). Beestel, you have to read through the details of each device to find out what is best for you and your reading needs.
Laurie A.

Ruling Spurs Effort to Form Digital Public Library - 0 views

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    A nice overview of how DPL differs from other mass-digitization projects such as Europeana and Google Books
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    I cite this article on one of my pages. I am also trying to upload it (to doc sharing?) as a pdf because people say that these articles are behind the new pay wall.
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    You can upload it to your google site page too. In the editing view, tere's a file uploaded at the bottom of each page
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    I have uploaded other pdf documents at the bottom of one of my pages, but not the Times articles because I thought they would be accessible through the link. However, I don't know whether people notice docs at the bottom of the Google page even though I say "attached below" in the citation. The Times articles are now on ecollege in doc sharing and attached to my discussion reply. I hope that the Economist doesn't block users.
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    I recently also uploaded the Times articles as PDFs to my second page.
Anna Lisa Raya Rivera

E-Book Sales Rise in Children's and Young Adult Categories - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    I'm surprised that this NYT story doesn't have any better reasons for why teenagers are a new surging market in ebook sales. My guess, which I posted on eCollege was that they're used to having tech gadgets in their hands and that maybe a book seems antiquated to them. But that's just my guess.
Anna Lisa Raya Rivera

The E-Textbook Experiment Turns A Page : NPR - 0 views

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    This NPR story shows how an etextbook can be more contextual than a standard 2-D book. Imagine being able to watch an example of cell division and not just read about it?
Anna Lisa Raya Rivera

Future of the Book - 0 views

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    Design firm IDEO came up with some crazy ideas for the future of the book, one of which is really social in nature. These are some cool ideas/videos.
Jessica McDonough

Tech Brigands - 0 views

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    Amazon's Cloud Drive allows you to upload to Amazon's servers your music, ebooks etc, but the content companies don't want you to be able to hold onto the content.
Jessica McDonough

E-book business should take a page from music industry and go DRM-free - 0 views

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    Good review of the issues with DRM in ebooks.
Laurie A.

Amazon Kindle to open up to library lending - 0 views

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    Ok, this is exciting, however, we don't know the details yet: "The company did not say how long the lending period for Kindle e-books would be, or if there were any restrictions on the number of checkouts for any books."
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    There is a lot of back and forth about this news in the library world. I have yet to give the Amazon annoncement the fine tooth comb treatment, but there are plenty of questions. Chief among them for me would be: What is a library's financial incentive to promote the Kindle (free or exceeding cheap content to loan would be a fine answer for me). Another issue has come up on public library list serves regarding Harper Collins' policies. It has come out that part of the agreement is that Harper Collins will have access to patron information. Although I have yet to see anyone explain the details of this aspect of Harper Collins' agrrement, would that be something Amazon would want as well?
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