TeleRead: Bring the E-Books Home

News & views on e-books, libraries, publishing and related topics

Archive for October, 2007

Nanowrimo and Me: Fascinating Screwdrivers

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

By Robert Nagle

A short personal announcement: I have decided to participate in this year’s National Novel Writing Month (NANOWRIMO) competition. I’ll be a writing a novel called Fascinating Screwdrivers (the life story of a man who collects crazy things). I’ll also be keeping a weblog diary of my writing progress throughout the month. I’ll be writing it under a pseudonym, Thurston Borgraves.

Dickens

Nanowrimo, if you recall,  is a “fun, seat-of-your-pants approach to novel writing.” You have 30 days to write a 50,000 page in the month of November. (Here’s a podcast interview on the Writing Show with Nanowrimo founder Chris Baty) . In 2006 they had 80,000 participants with 13,000 people writing 50,000 words. Of course, the contest is a little absurd and no one verifies anything; and even if you complete 50,000 words, all you receive is a lousy certificate. Still, there is a feeling of accomplishment, plus bragging rights at cocktail parties.

Although the Nanowrimo forums is agonizingly slow, I was able to discover a mini-community of nanowrimo contestants from Houston. Judging from the number of social events planned for my city alone, one would think that these people are either fulltime socialites, members of a religious cult or Alcoholics Anonymous members making sure you haven’t fallen off the wagon. Truthfully, although I’ll be busy with my own novel, curiosity compels me to attend at least one get-together, if only to see how a nanowrimo cult member behaves in everyday social interactions. (more…)

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New Sony Reader at 30,000 feet: Mostly praise from Tim Bajarin, well-known industry analyst, in PC Mag

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

By David Rothman

timbajarin Tim Bajarin, a well-known industry analyst, tested the new Sony on a European trip and liked the results even though he cautions that e-book tech is still at the early-adopter stage. Here’s his PC Mag writeup.

In a nutshell, he sees four obstacles for the Sony. First, reluctance to shift from paper, at least among aging baby boomers, the very people who could benefit from the large-font option. Second, the cost of $299. Third, lack of color, which could hurt the Reader in the education market. Fourth, not enough digitized. That said, Bajarin believes that e-books are here to stay.

Meanwhile I hope that IDPF standard-setters will read between the lines and hurry up with format-validation and the .epub logos it could make possible—to simplify e-books, with those boomers in mind. Elimination of DRM would help as well. But if not—I won’t dream—the IDPF should press hard for DRM standards. “DRM is still a tough nut,” Adobe’s Bill McCoy recently blogged, “but with epub providing the open standard complement to PDF for reflow-centric text-based content, we are well on our way.” I hope so, Bill.

Related: Bill’s thoughts on the future of the iTunes store. Will we see many iTunes stores in time? And what are the lessons for e-books? I’m slightly less optimistic than Bill, in terms of avoidance of onerous centralization. Amazon is already acting like a nasty monopolist in casting out the PDF option in favor of its own Mobipocket. Yet one more argument for standards!

And speaking of Amazon, Sony’s rival: Oh, the arrogance of Amazon when it comes to my obtaining a review unit of the Kindle—even for a venerable publication like Publishers Weekly! Faithful to the official script from above, an Amazon guy acted as if the Kindle didn’t exist. I’m not going to let this influence my opinion of the machine, which seems to have many promising features, such as word-search. It will influence my opinion of Amazon—in terms of its publisher-friendliness or lack thereof—if these games continue.

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Experimenting with epub - Creation

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

By Joseph Gray

Moderator’s note: We welcome Joseph Gray, a super-helpful TeleBlog commenter and a standards-loving IT guy, as our latest contributor. This is Part I of a two-part series. - DR

IDPFWith the recent finalization by the IDPF of the three specifications that comprise an epub, I thought I would see exactly what this new ebook format was capable of. For testing purposes, I created an epub using the information in the IDPF specifications. To the best of my knowledge, the only commercial software currently available for creating an epub is Adobe InDesign. I took the low tech approach and used a text editor.

In this article, I will detail the steps necessary to create an epub using a text editor and a program like WinZip or 7Zip. In the second installment, I will describe some of my experiences with the epub reading software currently available. These are FBReader, Adobe Digital Editions and the Openberg Lector plugin for Firefox.

I initially found information about the process of creating an epub detailed on a few other web sites. Although very helpful, some of the information on these other sites was written before the IDPF specifications were finalized, so it was no longer completely accurate. I will provide an updated example here. Note that any information provided in this article is my interpretation of the specifications and may also be in error. You should check the specification documents yourself to ensure accuracy. (more…)

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Can the TeleRead site aid e-book research?

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

By Prof. Richard Bellaver

childbsustudyDuring the past year my Ball State University students have been researching the literature (that’s academic talk for “trying to find out”) on e-book devices.

They have tried to see if there is evidence that the use of the devices is of value to grade school students.

They have not found a great deal of evidence, but what they have found is discouraging to us who think that e-book devices can be useful.

Most of the studies have been short term with few students participating.

There are also many caveats that imply that if we knew more about usability of the devices we might get better (not necessarily positive) results.

New studies would help

It appears that in order to get to the bottom of questions in the literature, research is necessary into whether there is any learning value to using electronic devices and how the devices can be fit into the classroom environment. New studies need to look at small components of both learning and usability over time with larger and more demographically representative subjects.

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.epub woes ahead because of OpenDocument Foundation problem with OCF?

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

By David Rothman

idpf “A group that was set up to promote the Open Document Format for Office Applications (ODF) is abandoning its support of that file format in favor of a set of specifications developed by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C).” - Computerworld.

More info: The OpenDocument Foundation is said to believes that W3C’s Compound Document Formats would be a better, more open choice,  due to Sun Microsoft’s growing ties with Microsoft and the resultant effect on ODF development. Update: Not everyone likes the foundation’s new direction. Cerebus and some participants in a Slashdot discussion are suspicious about the foundation.

So what might be the impact on the IDPF, the e-book trade and standards group, which adopted ODF as a container format for .epub files? Any informed opinions on how easily the IDPF could bounce back from this? Or should the IDPF just ignore the change? Hachette Book Group USA is already gearing up to distribute e-books in .epub.

Important detail: The IDPF’s container format was intended to merge with the ODF Container in the near future.

Update, 6:21 a.m. : Peter Sorotokin at Adobe says the IDPF can move smoothly to the new arrangement.

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Adobe Reader and FBReader included with the Eee laptop

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

By David Rothman

asus-eee-pc-701 So how’s the Eee laptop as a Web browswer and e-book reader?

1. “Webpages look great,” comes the word from a poster at eeeuser.com. No problems. PDF’s look great, I would say no problems at all if you have 1 page across. If you open a book style 2 page across PDF it gets a little crowded and you may have to zoom in and look at one page at a time. Might be a nice ebook reader for those interested. I’ll get back to you on the eyestrain about 12 hours from now- i don’t think it will be a problem though.” What’s more, Mike Cane, who’s eager to get his own Eee, has learned that it comes with a real Adobe reader, 7.0. See photo showing double pages.

2. What’s more, FBReader, which can read .epub, HTML, ASCII, and a bunch of other formats, is also supplied, according to a MobileRead post from Alan Wallcraft.

Related: Allasus.com site, where prices start at $259. Also see Wikipedia item on company.

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First batch of Cybook Gen3s sold out?

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

By David Rothman

cybooksaleJoseph Gray spotted this just now on the Bookeen site:

"Due to overwhelming demand, all orders from now on will ship between December 5 and December 13, 2007."

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The New Yorker is as wrong about e-libraries as Martin Luther apparently was about paper books

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

By David Rothman

futureofreadingarticle Here’s a challenge for The New Yorker. Can its contributors write up e-libraries without droning on about how we’ll always need paper books? Is every e-book lover an arson-minded Visigoth eager to burn down the great paper collections or rob them of funding? And do we all hate the idea of paper backups—or, for that matter, Main Street bookstores?

In Future Reading: Digitization and its Discontents, the latest e-skepticism from the magazine, the famed scholar Anthony Grafton wisely points out the shortcoming of existing digitization projects, such as the gaps even in the planned collections. But he barely mentions the Internet Archive’s Open Content Alliance and refers not once by name to Brewster Kahle, the brilliant MIT-educated founder of the archive who for years has been addressing the “Can we do it?” details of a universal library. The questions Grafton raises, in the magazine’s November 5 issue, should matter to e-publishers and others in E, not just librarians and archivists. Books are the ultimate long-term medium. Without trustworthy storage and the ability to enjoy digital books reliably in the future—major reasons why proprietary formats and DRM worry me—how can we take e-books as seriously as literature as we do paper books? I, too, am an e-skeptic, but, I hope, more open to the possibilities than Grafton is.

Not just helter-skelter, please

I want to see every book, every other document of importance, digitized someday—not just the texts but the full images. It’s an elusive goal, but we can at least strive for well-stocked national digital libraries and cheer on government-related international efforts as well as Brewster Kahle’s. I want master indexing and comprehensive, typo-proof searches, and I don’t want the preservation—on paper or in bits and bytes—to happen helter-skelter. We’re talking about far, far more than navigation and discovery issues.

The social rewards of a universal library, complete with attention paid to reading devices and integration with existing libraries and schools, could be substantial. As Brewster has observed, the attitude of young people today is, “If it doesn’t exist on the Internet, it doesn’t exist.” Despite all the high-minded talk of encouraging students to use the library in person, a laudable goal, should we stake the future of books to this? We should worry not just about physical preservation of books but about preservation of society’s interest in them.

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Cybook Gen3 info: The currency and Mac issues and others, including HTML

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

By David Rothman

cybookgen3big Why does the Cybook Gen3 cost more in Europe than in the States? Will this new E Ink machine (price $US350) work with Macs? What can the HTML viewer do? Below are answers that Michael Dehan of Bookeen kindly supplied to those and other questions. Thanks, Michael! Subheads are mine.

The NAEB machine

Concerning NAEB, we haven’t set all the details with them right now (due mainly to us). More to come very soon.

Currency issues

Concerning Euro-Dollar, don’t forget VAT, taxes and shipment price. If we compare with standard practices in the Consumer Electronics industry, Apple proposes higher model prices in Euro than in US dollars on their Apple store, Sony does the same with the PS3, Archos (a French company) proposes the same model price in Euros and USD for their MPEG4 players.

Euro warranties vs. U.S. ones

European warranty is one year, but there is a European directive which describes “the principle of the conformity of the product with the contract” which is not linked to defects or malfunctions which is covered by a standard guarantee. According to the directive: “The seller is liable to the consumer for any lack of conformity which exists when the goods are delivered to the consumer and which becomes apparent within a period of two years.”

Let’s take an example, I say on my notice that my device supports PDF, but when I deliver it, it appears that PDF is not supported and I release no software upgrade to correct the issue. Then there is a lack of conformity between the device and its description; the customer can ask to get a device which works in conformity with the notice and this during two years.

For info our device does support PDF. As written in our website and packaging.

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Of Kafka, computers, e-books, hard hats and tip jars

Monday, October 29th, 2007

By David Rothman

kafkaNaNoWriMo, aka national National Writing Month, is almost here, and Robert Nagle will be along with the details. The idea is to get something on paper even if you rush the job. Meanwhile I’ve been reading, on my Sony PRS-505, one of the fiction’s most famous procrastinators. Yes, that’s Franz Kafka to the left.

Kakfa wrote his share of finished short stories. But novels? Even The Trial was incomplete, missing certain chapter numbers and parts of some chapters.

What he did write might come out in paragraphs of Faulknerian length, and Sony-style machines are better than PDAs at coping with this. The sharp E Ink on the six-inch screen can display several hundred words at once—far more than on a typical PDA.

Kafka’s hypothetical machine and Ellison’s real Osborne

So how would Kafka have fared in the era of computers and word-processors? As in Ralph Ellison’s case, where we’re talking reality in the form of an Osborne 1, scholars might hold a debate. Would Kafka the perfectionist have procrastinated even more while he lingered on minor details and used the Osborne to address them? Or would computers have made it possible for him to shuffle words around more easily and give us more completed-works?

Returning to the negative, could someone as obsessed and nerdish as Kafka have actually forsaken novel-writing for programming? He actually loved doing corporate annual reports or at least was proud of his output.

Franz as a techie: The Hard Hat connection 

In his own way and in his own time, Kafka was actually a techie—having invented the civilian hard hat. Oh, the connections to be made, trivial or not! I remember the Nixon propaganda machine’s fondness for Hard Hats, the human variety, the Silent Minority members. And then from there, yes, we think of the Kafkaesque qualities of the Patriot Act and today’s Nixon, George Bush, who makes Tricky look like Clarence Darrow. W. is right out of The Trial, considering his love of bureaucracy and secretive "justice" and lack of government accountability.

The tip jar angle

Finally, here’s another Kafka-related question. Would tip jars have helped Kafka if he’d had the nerve to share his works more widely through the Net and otherwise. Robert thinks so, and I can see certain possibilities here, given the quality of Kafka’s writing and the passion of his few but ardent fans. But my guess is that Kafka would still have been at work at day job like his insurance company gig—leaving it up to more commercial geniuses like Philip Roth to capitalize eventually on, say, the concept behind The Metamorphosis.

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E-Books, One Laptop Per Child project, plenty else could benefit from new memory chips if they pan out

Monday, October 29th, 2007

By David Rothman

locpictureGood-bye hard disks? Hello, your own Library of Congress? Well, we’re not there yet. But in the next few years, a new technology could lead to thumb-sized solid state drives storing a terabyte each. Power consumption might be one-thousandth of flash memory and costs perhaps one-tenth. Just the ticket for multimedia e-books, eh? Or even high-res movies inside them?

In between his CSSing for the TeleBlog, Jon Noring took time out for some calculations. He figured that 20 million books exist in the world and that 18,000 of these drives would do the trick for high-res images of them.

If nothing else, imagine the benefits for the One Laptop Per Child project. Even without WiFi, kids in mountains and remote jungles could enjoy immediate access to huge collections of knowledge—well, budgets and copyright gods permitting. Perhaps the already-available info would be the equivalent of a cache, reducing the need for new downloading when WiFi was available.

The gobbledygook for the technology is programmable metallization cell (PMC), and Wired News has the details, inspiring the inevitable Slashdotting.

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Breaking in a new WordPress theme: Yes, we’ll increase the type size and make other tweaks

Sunday, October 28th, 2007

By David Rothman

roadworksignsmall Yes, we’re experimenting with a new WordPress theme. Bear with us. We know the type is too small, and we may also adjust colors. Keep the feedback coming. Meanwhile thanks to Jon Noring for his ongoing CSS work and for serving as a second part of eyes! - DR

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