“Evan Schnittman, head of biz dev at 35,000-title textbook publisher Oxford University Press, says a pal at one of the ‘biggest trade publishers in the world’ called him this week, shocked at how well Kindle-formatted books had sold in December, just after the Kindle’s launch.” - Richard McRoskey, Silicon Alley Insider
The TeleRead take: That’s not all. SAI further reports that Evan looked at royalty statements “which he said ’stunned’ him: He had expected to sell up to 200 Kindle titles in December, but says the real numbers were ‘an order of magnitude’ more than that.” What he isn’t sure about is if the roll will go on. Also, keep in mind that Oxford in the past was doing digital sales only to libraries (although, yes, Oxford also supplies some terrific books to the ad-supported Wowio service, such as a first-rate Mencken bio).
While I’m displeased by Amazon’s use of a special Kindle format, actually just tweaked Mobipocket, I am delighted over the success of the machine—since other brands will bask in its glow. In fact, Oxford seems likely to get books into Sony format. Now wouldn’t it be great if the IDPF’s .epub format were around as a standard. In fact, ideally, the forthcoming Adobe software for the Sony PRS-505 firmware update will be able to read .epub, as we currently expect—not just the proprietary BBeB format.
(Thanks to Peter Brantley.)
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Sphere: Related ContentBy Joe Wikert, a VP in the Professional/Trade division of John Wiley & Sons
Moderator’s note: For another perspective on the Kindle and rivals, check out Benjamin Higginbotham’s Tech Evangelist video shown here. - D.R.
Microsoft Senior Program Manager and Wiley author Scott Hanselman is a former Sony Reader user who is now a Kindle convert. In this blog post Scott covers everything he loves about his new Kindle. He’s so right about the one reason the Kindle exists: “To extract money from my wallet.”
I find it interesting that Scott has grown tired of his iPod and leans more towards XM Radio, particularly since I’m heading in the opposite direction. I’ve had XM for a couple of years now and find that the old cable line is true: There are 500 channels and nothing is on! (Or in the case of XM, only about 170 channels.) I recently bought an 80-gig Zune and am rapidly drifting away from XM Radio. I’d rather use randomize and the fast forward button to listen to what I want to, not what some satellite DJ wants to play.
Be sure to read Scott’s entire review of the Kindle; he covers the pros and cons quite effectively.
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Sphere: Related ContentBy Prof. Peter Kerry Powers, English Dept. Chair, Messiah College
Prof. Powers is chair of Messiah College’s English Department. We’ll follow him as he befriends—or gives up on?—various forms of book-related technology.
A colleague who is a librarian and shares a lot of my interests in writing and reading sent me the following from a friend’s blog:
“In a previous post my daughter blew me away with her use of eLocker to access her school files from home. Last night my son used MyAccess [link added] to write an essay online. Big whoop—right? Get this—it analyzed and graded it in an instant. Took about 3 seconds tops and he was looking at a score that broke out scoring elements not only in spelling and grammar (Word can do that)—things like content and delivery, organization, completeness of development. It was like having my 5th grade English teacher right there—red pen in hand. It saves all of his essays and projects and graphs out a cumulative progression over time, showing improvements and areas to work on. Incredible.”
The ballyhoo
“With MY Access!®,” the blog quotes the company, “students are motivated to write more and attain higher scores on statewide writing assessments. By using MY Access! in the classroom, teachers can provide students with the practice they need to improve their writing skills. The program’s powerful scoring engine grades students’ essays instantly and provides targeted feedback, freeing teachers from grading thousands of papers by hand and giving them more time to conduct differentiated instruction and curriculum planning.”
I wish I could share the enthusiasm, but I am more than a little skeptical. It may be the science/humanities divide in play, but there is no getting past the fact that a lot of this represents some of the absolutely worst things that are happening with writing in our secondary schools. And we continue to wonder why our kids can’t write and prefer to do anything but read?
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I’m about to post Peter Kerry Powers’ perspicacious essay “Writing by the numbers: Who needs an audience?” So what is the best way to learn writing? How about reading—of narrative works, not just exposition alone? This is no small part of the rationale behind the TeleRead plan for a well-stocked national digital library system blended in with local schools and libraries.
Yes, formal instruction in writing can help, but it’s no replacement. Below I’ll highlight a just-received comment from a TeleBlog reader named William—titled “How an interest in narrative helped my career”:
“I write sales copy for several multi-million dollar Internet businesses. When I applied for my position I needed to submit a writing sample. To differentiate myself I submitted the first few pages of an unpublished novel I’m finishing up rather than sales copy. It got me in for an interview and I got the job.
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Neil Gaiman’s American Gods wil be available for a month for viewing online, although, alas, it can’t be downloaded (HarperCollins page and Gaiman blog entry, via Mobile Read). It’s s-l-o-w browsing. Perhaps Harper would do better to make a downloadable copy available for a limited time. Even a DRMed copy would be better than the current arrangement.
Meanwhile TOR’s e-book giveaway continues, with Robert Charles Wilson’s Spin being the latest download available in PDF, HTML and Mobipocket. TOR says: “Within a day or so of sending us your
address, you should receive an email with a download link for this week’s free book.” In addition, TOR will offer free wallpapers from “some of the best artists in science fiction and fantasy.”
Related: Gretchen Angelo’s Liberte, a free intro to French (via Ficbot’s freebie site). A Yale Ph.D. in French, she teaches the language and literature at California State University, and Ficbot praises the book as “complete and very polished-looking.” The TeleBlog draws its share of readers in France, and I’d welcome their opinions of the Angelo book. In honor of France and its people, perhaps the book can be made available not just as a PDF but also in the French-originated Mobipocket format—much easier to read on handhelds than the Adobe format is.
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A bespectacled party guest in The Great Gatsby marvels over the books in Jay Gatsby’s library, perhaps a little sarcastically: “Absolutely real—have pages and everything. I thought they’d be a nice durable cardboard.” Holding up Volume One of the Stoddard Lectures, he “cries triumphantly”: “See! It’s a bona-fide piece of printed matter. It fooled me. This fella’s a regular Belasco. It’s a triumph. What thoroughness! What realism! Knew when to stop, too—didn’t cut the pages. But what do you want? What do you expect?”
Now the Los Angeles Times is out with a story on home libraries and ways to show off titles—ideally real, though you can never be certain these days. Ah, books as decorations! Many of my favorite titles don’t exist in my personal library other than as electrons, and I’m too busy with writing projects to offer a reading list here or at a site like LibraryThing, even though I may in the future. I’d rather spend my limited spare time actually reading (now playing on my XO screen: Beautiful Children). Even so, I can understand the urge to let books serve as social objects, at least virtually, and I like LibraryThing’s use of books as ways to connect people with similar interests.
The big-screen TV angle
But how about Real Life, offline? What to do about friends who visit your home rather than running across you on the Net? Well, here’s a suggestion for both the publishing and consumer electronics industries. Suppose big-screen televisions could display covers of e-books you’ve read, and maybe p-books, too?
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“…she weakens her argument by ranting with an elitist tone against modern life with its slang, informality and new gadgets. Having downloaded her book to my digital reader, I found her hostility to eBooks silly.” - USA Today reviewer Deirdre Donahue on Susan Jacoby’s The Age of American Unreason.
The TeleRead take: E-books can expand the range of books available and make them usable in new ways; that’s hardly a threat to the national IQ. The challenge is to blend them in well with local schools and libraries and encourage young people to love immersive reading—as opposed to simply flitting from link to link. I haven’t read the Jacoby book yet, but certainly would agree with many of the points she reportedly makes, and I hope she’ll reconsider her condemnation of E.
Related: Dumber and Dumber: Are Americans Hostile to Knowledge?, in the New York Times.
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The iPhone is a big hit among TeleBlog readers if you go by a poll from some months back, which showed that half either owned a phone or were planning to buy one. Apple let people down, however, by not making the iPhone and the related iPod touch models very friendly to software from third-party developers.
Now that’s about to change with the March 6 release of an official software developers kit. Yep, Apple has actually set a definite date now. What a way—deliberately or not—to celebrate Read an E-Book Week!
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Could a better Kindle have come from a design student in Australia than from the Amazon pros?
Nedzad Mujcinovic, winner of a design award at Monash University, come up with the Livre, the e-book concept above. I actually prefer the Sony Reader’s looks. But I love the idea of a multitouch interface to simplify matters for users; just keep on mind that this would have significantly jacked up the Kindle’s $400 cost. Click here for a full-sized view. In Engadget’s words:
“The system uses an e-ink screen overlaid with a touch surface, thus forgoing the multitudinous buttons of the Kindle for an ultra-simple, gesture-based input scheme. Pages can be turned by sliding your finger from corner to corner, though double- and triple-finger gestures will advance the book by ten and 50 pages, respectively. Most notable for real book fans is the inclusion of a leather stitched cover, meant to evoke the look and feel of the device’s analog counterpart.”
So, gang, what do you think?
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Sphere: Related ContentRita Toews, creator of Read An E-Book Week, was kind enough to explain the corrected dates. Thanks, Rita! - David
As you mentioned, David, Read An E-Book Week is a different date each year because of the way the month starts. In 2002 I originally registered it as the second full week of March, but over the years it has crept to the second week of March. I didn’t do the promoting last year, and this year when I made up the press release I used the second full week of March.
When the error was brought to my attention I tried to correct it, but a lot of press releases had gone out. Mea culpa.
The Biff Mitchell dates were from a few years back when he promoted the week while I was out of the country.
I’ve redone the site with the correct days and had hoped that anyone interested in the week would visit the site and see that the dates runs from March 2 - 8th.
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The independent OLPC News has taken aim at an OLPC copycat computer selling for $195: One Elonex Copycat Per Laptop Company. The $195 is about what the OLPC charges governments. Under the recently expired Give One Get One program, individuals could pay $400 to buy a laptop for themselves and a child in a developing country.
Also just out is the Aware A-Book AW-300, shown here. Meanwhile VirtualHosting.com has written up the Top 5 Sub-$300 Laptops—that’s VH’s wordings. First one mentioned is the Intel Classmate.
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William F. Buckley, Jr., my political opposite but a gung-ho booster of e-books and the TeleRead proposal, calling for a well-stocked national digital library system, blended in with local libraries and schools, is dead at the age of 82. RIP, Bill. From a USA Today blog:
“National Review Online, an outgrowth of the magazine Buckley founded, describes his death at The Corner: I’m devastated to report that our dear friend, mentor, leader, and founder William F. Buckley Jr., died overnight in his study in Stamford, Connecticut. After year of illness, he died while at work; if he had been given a choice on how to depart this world, I suspect that would have been exactly it. At home, still devoted to the war of ideas.“
Even while fighting his wars, however, WFB had his share of liberal friends, among them John Kenneth Galbraith, and he could be surprisingly open-minded on matters ranging from marijuana use to, yes, TeleRead, about which he said:
“Andrew Carnegie, if he were alive, would probably buy TeleRead from Mr. Rothman for $1, develop the whole idea at his own expense, and then make a gift of it to the American people.”
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