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Archive for April, 2006

‘Toll Lane Ahead for Internet Traffic?’–and Galbraith must already be turning over in his grave
April 30, 2006 | 10:47 pm

John Kenneth GalbraithEWeek looks anew at the Net neutrality issue. Related: Save the Internet Coalition and E-books and the glories of Net neutrality. Many and perhaps most readers of the TeleBlog have Web sites. This is not an abstract issue. Also: John Kenneth Galbraith's obit in the New York Times and Galbraith-related video and audio clips. You don't have to be a Galbraith-style economist to wonder if the laissez-faire zealots in Washington have gotten out of control on Net matters dear to us....

A Project Gutenberg horror story
April 30, 2006 | 9:09 am

PG logoIf--like me!--you love the feel of physical books, the way they smell, the sound they make when you rusttle through the pages; if you like the artifact almost as much as the book itself, because it is the print and the cover and the fact that it is always near you, and the fact that it has a history that reminds you of the marvelous story it contains; if the thought of destroying such a book horrifies you, do not read on. Project Gutenberg owns a couple of highspeed scanners. They are responsible for a substantial part of the scanning that...

E-book success story: ‘From the trailer park to the New York Times best seller list in zero to sixty’
April 30, 2006 | 8:18 am

Davidson novelThe p-book world is looking more and more to tested e-authors, even if some entertainers like Ed Howerdershelt have yet to be discovered. Here's an excerpt from Sara Fitzgerald's Romance, Writ Large in today's Washington Post: MaryJanice Davidson [link added], a 36-year-old Minnesota writer, described her career as going "from the trailer park to the New York Times bestseller list in zero to 60." She had been trying to sell her manuscripts since she was 21, and "was tired of being told that no one was interested in paranormal or really sexy books." So she turned to e-publishing. Her first book,...

E-books on a watch: A timely Palm OS PDA from Abacus
April 30, 2006 | 7:45 am

Wrst PDA"With the Abacus WristPDA you can read eBooks...provided you set the reader to use a BIG font..." - The Inquirer on the Abacus WristPDA. The TeleRead take: And here you thought that e-books on an iPod would make you blind. Related: the Seiko E Ink watch and the Nokia 888 slap bracelet. Correction, 2:03 p.m.: The $8.95 mentioned is for the watch cover, not the actual price of the watch. Alas, PC Mag had the info wrong. Thanks for the catch, Andre and Wes!...

‘Do no evil’? Fine, Google: Don’t abet ‘The Web’s Million-Dollar Typos’
April 30, 2006 | 6:40 am

Ben Edelman"It seems very hard to reconcile Google's support of this activity with their 'Do No Evil' motto." - Harvard researcher Ben Edelman on the Google ads that appear on the typo-based Web sites--as quoted in the Washington Post. The TeleRead take: Amen, Ben! Disclosure: I own a very small slice of Google stock as part of my pathetic retirement savings....

PalmAddict: Wrong on interactive e-books but helpful on other topics
April 30, 2006 | 5:33 am

PalmRemember the Kurt Vonnegut story where you must wear a mask if you're beautiful and carry around lead weights if you're trim? I've used Harrison Bergeron before to warn against Draconian DRM. And now I'll summon up the parallel again in reply to attacks by Palm Addict's Peter Wolchak and Jennifer Chappell against interactivty. No, we shouldn't do interactivity for its own sake, but we also shouldn't try to resist e-book standards that facilitate its spread. So, Peter and Jennifer, whether or not you've heard of OpenReader, here are some examples of useful interactivity: Literary classics. Enjoy the book the old-fashioned...

First nut-growers book posted to Project Gutenberg
April 29, 2006 | 6:50 pm

Northern Nuts Growers Association logoMarilynda Fraser-Cunliffe reports that the first book related to the Northern Nut Growers Association (NNGA) has been posted at Project Gutenberg (PG). As you may remember, we reported on this rather unique joint venture between the NNGA and Distributed Proofreaders (DP) before. The latter are the largest supplier of etexts to Project Gutenberg. The first of the books from the NNGA library to be posted to PG is "Nut Growing in the North: A Personal Story of the Author's Experience of 33 Years with Nut Culture in Minnesota and Wisconsin" by Carl Weschcke (PG etext #18189). It was posted to PG...

Automatic digitization with … Lego
April 29, 2006 | 4:03 pm

In a comment on yesterday's home digitization poll Andre K refers to the blog of one Eric Mack, who in turn links to a funny DIY project by Muranushi Takayuki, the Fullauto Bookscanner, which is exactly that, and which is built using Lego. Cool! The contraption has a pc that controls the process, an upside down flatbed scanner (so that the book can lie on its spine) and a page turning device. The lego is used for the latter part. The scanner scans two pages, then the page turning device first lowers the book, then rubs an eraser over the...

‘Times Reader’ is part of Microsoft assault on Adobe–and a setback for independent-minded publishers
April 29, 2006 | 11:31 am

Times Reader"Microsoft and The New York Times unveiled software on Friday that would allow readers to download an electronic version of the newspaper and view it on a portable device." - New York Times. Also see CNet and Microsoft news release and Gates speech and AP item. The TeleRead take: Wow, that's right smack in PDF territory and notches up the battle between Microsoft and Adobe. "The software would allow The Times to replicate its look--fonts, typeface and layout--more closely than its Web site now does," says the Times. But should the goal be a digital imitation of the paper Times or...

The iLiad and the Founder e-book empire: China as E-book Central
April 29, 2006 | 3:53 am

Henry's loaner iRexHenrique Catarrunas in Portugal, aka Henrycat, is one lucky e-book lover. Already a Librie pioneer, he's now is playing with his "permanent loaner" iLiad over the weekend. Here's part of a photograph, which doesn't do justice to the screen's contrast. Meanwhile Henry assures MobileReaders that the machine can read HTML, just as the photo shows. And it also can read PDF although the early version of the reader is a bit slow. Pokey, too, is the provider of the linux software--this on top of some e-commerce hassles. No big deal. We're talking hardware, not vaporware. Apabi reader just part of the...

‘Wired’ students reading p-books: Some issues surrounding university e-book adoption
April 28, 2006 | 9:37 pm

Mike ShatzkinAs a member of a university community, I'm always interested in what publishing industry people have to say about e-books in academia. A couple weeks ago, there was a post linking to a speech by Mike Shatzkin, which discussed the topic. He suggests that the natural grouping of interests present in a university setting has caused "college and professional publishing [to live] in the new digital world far more than trade or consumer publishing." He also mentions that Abebooks.com found 49% of 5,000 students polled "'were not prepared' to use digital texts at all", but is unclear "whether the students...

‘How limited supply may (not) relate to e-book pricing’
April 28, 2006 | 1:56 pm

Cell"I suspect the high prices of e-books are deliberate. Publishers are afraid that they cannibalize sales of paper books if e-books became ready for mainstream. So they are going to keep their artificially inflated prices, and I am afraid adding supply, as Bill McCoy suggested, won't make a difference here." - Alex at MobileRead, commenting on Bill McCoy's post on book pricing. Possible example: Cell, the Stephen King novel, costs $9.99 (excluding shipping) as a paperback at Amazon and $9.74 in e-book form. And actually the $9.74 is a bargain compared to many e-books. Related: Slasher story for publishers: The Tor...