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Category Archives: e-book
Eye doc praises Kindle as gizmo for sight-impaired
“The Amazon Kindle 2, holds a lot of promise for patients that have poor vision as a result of macular degeneration, retinitis pigmentosa, glaucoma or any ocular condition that impairs vision.” – Blog item by Richard Driscoll, owner of Total Eye Care, in the Dallas area.
Related: Damn it, Obama, when are you gonna get [...] Continue reading
New Zealand publishers set action plan to boost digital industry
Editor’s Note: I found the below blog post especially interesting. It’s by Martin Taylor, the Director of the New Zealand Publishing Forum and is reproduced with his permission. As Martin says, the post might interest readers curious about the smaller international markets. Just how do people there see the ebook opportunity, and what are and [...] Continue reading
Posted in Paul Biba, Uncategorized, book publishing, e-book, e-book economics, e-books, ebook, ebook publishing, ebooks
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Damn it, Obama, when are you gonna get this e-book thing? Check out Donalyn Miller’s literacy efforts and connect the dots!
Barack Obama drew a $500,000 advance for a children’s book, a mere five days before swearing a presidential oath. I’m happy for him. Literacy has served The First Reader well. So has technology—as shown by his fondness for BlackBerry-style devices and using the Net to raise campaign money.
Why, then, isn’t the First Reader more [...] Continue reading
Posted in E-books and all that, Education, Libraries, One Laptop Per Child, Uncategorized, e-book, e-book economics, e-book ergonomics, e-book pricing, e-book technology, e-books, e-books and other digipubs, ebook, ebook pricing, ebook publishing, ebooks, librarian, librarians, libraries + schools + tech, library
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No April Fools’ joke apparently: The REAL Cheryl Kaye Tardiff warned against Amazon zapping book reviews
I’ve just gotten a Tweet from Canadian suspense writer Cheryl Kaye Tardiff. She thanks me for my TeleRead post about Amazon’s war against authors—the evil souls donating free reviews of other writers’ books in return for a little publicity.
Via Twitter, the note came from a cherylktardif account listed with 709 followers. So I’m [...] Continue reading
Kindling interest in the American short story
Could the Kindle and similar e-readers revive interest in the American short story? That’s the question raised in a New York Times item, by A.O. Scott.
"The new, post-print literary media are certainly amenable to brevity, a genuine advantage for reading off a screen," Scott writes. "The blog post and the tweet may be ephemeral [...] Continue reading
True or April Fools’ joke? Amazon said to be deleting book reviews that authors write with promo in mind
I’ve just established an outpost on Amazon for promoting The Solomon Scandals.
The standard advice from book-marketing gurus, furthermore, is to review other writers’ titles on Amazon and along the way mention your own book in your signature line. I might do that.
But wait! Has Amazon started deleting reviews with such .sig lines, as [...] Continue reading
Should Jonathan Stone do Twitter?
"Bradley Inman wants to create great fiction, dramatic online video and compelling Twitter stream[s]—and then roll them all into a multimedia hybrid that is tailored to the rapidly growing number of digital reading devices." – New York Times.
The TeleRead take: I’ve got mixed—very mixed—feelings about this.
In The Solomon Scandals, my reporter protagonist can’t bypass [...] Continue reading
Stanza adds dictionary in version 1.8
The new version of the Stanza e-reader, for the iPhone and Touch, includes a dictionary.
How to use it? Hold down your finger on the screen and watch it show yellow, then go to a white-on-black arrangement.
You can then follow the easy on-screen instructions to select which words to define. Exit by tapping [...] Continue reading
Easier ePub and PDF conversion for Kindle owners: Open source program runs natively on K machine
"Savory is an open source epub and PDF converter that actually runs natively on the Kindle. While it doesn’t add anything that you couldn’t do from a desktop, it streamlines the process, allowing you copy epubs and PDFs to your Kindle over USB or download them from the Web, and immediately read them offline." [...] Continue reading
IDPF reports January ebook sales up 173%
This is exciting news. The following is reprinted from Mark Coker’s Smashwords blog with Mark’s kind permission:
Alright folks. Turn your clocks forward. If you’re waiting for ebooks to go mainstream, it may have happened already. The IDPF reported today in an email to members (see below for snippets of the email) [...] Continue reading
Posted in IPDF, Mark Coker, Paul Biba, Uncategorized, e-book, e-books, ebook, ebooks, smashwords
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