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Monthly Archives: February 2009
eReport reviews Shortcovers
Here are some excerpts from Martin Taylor’s review of the service:
I checked Shortcovers out using its iPhone/iPod Touch reader app which works pretty well. Part of the Shortcovers proposition is its emphasis on lots of short content – under 5000 words – that you can easily read on your mobile phone. Most prominent among this [...] Continue reading
Posted in Paul Biba, Uncategorized, e-book, e-books, ebook, ebook publishing, ebooks
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Jennifer Chappell on 3 e-reading devices
A former associate of mine from PalmAddict has been writing for Treo Central. Jennifer has just written an excellent article on her reading experiences with a Centro, iPhone and Kindle 2. The article is well worth reading as she has always had a good “touch” about gadget writing.
From her article: When I [...] Continue reading
Posted in Amazon Kindle, Palm, Paul Biba, Uncategorized, e-book, e-books, ebook, ebooks, kindle
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DRM: ‘Why are publishers making the same mistake that the record companies made with Apple?’
Strange, isn’t it? Publishers don’t want Amazon to boss ‘em around on such issues as price—and yet they’re letting Amazon use DRM to lock in customers. This is hardly news to TeleRead readers. But it’s good to see Techdirt note the paradox.
Related: Techmeme roundup here. Angry Slashdot post here. Thanks to Joseph Gray and [...] Continue reading
Amazon’s retreat on text-to-speech: The Audible factor
No one believes Amazon’s text-to-speech retreat has anything to do with Audible?
So Amazon’s people gear up to fight the legal battle that will let the company do T-T-S on the Kindle. And then they find that they’ve has cut out one of the key foundations for a business just bought for $300 million? [...] Continue reading
ePub or not ePub?
Juger globalement d’un format comme ePub est un exercice délicat. Les problématiques qu’il soulève sont de tout ordre: stratégique, éditorial, financier, technologique, technique. Et il y a d’un coté l’approche théorique, de l’autre l’expérienc… Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
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Harlan Ellison An Edge in My Voice
At the beginning of the 1980′s Harlan Ellison agreed to do a regular column for the Los Angeles Weekly on the condition that they publish whatever he wrote, without revising it or suggesting rewrites. Little did they know what they were agreeing to. Had they read his introduction to the collected columns, An Edge in My Voice, beforehand rather than years later when he prepared it for publication, they might have demurred, and the world would be sixty-one literary gems poorer.
RC
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Introduction: Ominous Remarks for Late in the Evening
Both Hemingway and Scott Fitzgerald discovered a peculiar syndrome that affected critics of their work. They learned in the roughest way imaginable that if they were praised as great, fresh talents early on in their careers, that as they approached the middle years of writing they were “reevaluated.” The second guessers and the parvenus who could not, themselves, create the great and fresh stories, made their shaky reputations by means of pronunciamentos that advised those few literati who gave a damn, that les enfants terribles were now too long in the tooth to produce anything worth reading; that they were past it; and in the name of common decency should embarrass themselves no further by packing it in and retiring to the cultivation of Zen flower gardens. So they both croaked, and did the heavy deeds of assassination for their critics. But had they somehow managed to overcome cancer and alcoholism, had they managed to squeak through for another decade, they’d have found themselves lionized. Each would have made it through the shitrain to become le monstre sacré. Grand old men of letters. National treasures. Every last snippet they’d tapped out on yellow second-sheets sold at Sotheby’s for a pasha’s weight in rubies.
They never made it. Not rugged, spike-tough old Ernest, not lighter-than-air Scott. Time and gravity and the nibbling of minnows did them in. And so they don’t know that they are still famous–though seldom read–in the way that talk show guests are famous: you know their names and often their faces, but you can’t quite remember what the hell it is they did to make them “famous.”
The lesson we who work behind the words learn from this is that if your life is as interesting as your work, or even approaches that level of passion, there will be those who are not-quite-good-enough waiting in the tall grass, waiting to compound your fractures when your brittle bones splinter.
Never get too fat, never get too secure. The rat-things are waiting. Just hang in there long enough, like Borges or Howard Fast or Graham Greene or Jean Rhys, and the sheer volume of accumulated years will daunt all but the most vicious (who quickly self destruct when they try to savage the icons)
To read the complete introduction, click here.
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E-Reads is happy to offer An Edge in My Voice in e-book format for the first time. Watch this page for news of a paperback edition, and of course keep your eye peeled on Ellison’s author page at E-Reads for new additions to our collection of 32 masterpieces by a master author. Continue reading
Posted in Harlan Ellison, Uncategorized
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The Japanese Cellphone Novel Phenomenon
“Japanese got Jesus robots telling teenage fortunes.
For all we know and all we care they might as well be martians.”
Elvis Costello, “Tokyo Storm Warning”
That may be a little harsh (though it’s on my favorite Elvis Costello record), but CNN reports on the cellphone novel phenomenon that has swept Japan, a phenomenon that might not translate [...] Continue reading
Posted in News, Uncategorized
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Amazon backs off on Kindle text-to-speech feature
According to Brad Stone in the New York Times “Bits” blog, Amazon has announced that it will leave up to the publisher the decision of whether a book can be read aloud by the Kindle’s speech synthesizer. In their statement, they continue to insist that the feature is completely legal—”Nevertheless, we strongly believe many [...] Continue reading
Why the iPhone is not popular in Japan
Japan has gained a reputation as the land of the cell phone. The adoption and use of cells in Japan seems to be several years ahead of phone use in the west, and it has become an integral part of their culture.
For example, one season of the long-running Kamen (Masked) Rider series, Kamen [...] Continue reading
Posted in Apple, Chris Meadows, Japan, Uncategorized, iPhone and iPod Touch, smartphones
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Shortcovers is great for shopping, but reading an entire book ‘would be very tiresome,’ says Wired blogger
"Short Covers is a great little solution to the problem of finding new books online. Even if you don’t use the service to buy anything, it’s still a great way to browse for free, and ideal for those idle moments waiting in line at the grocery store." – Charlie Sorrel.
Some negatives: The screen is [...] Continue reading