7

Pirate bookOnly a few days ago I warned of the need for IDPF President Steve Potash and others to take care to separate the new IDPF e-book format from Adobe Digital Editions—developed by Adobe, one of the main supporters of the format.

Many e-reader products should to be able to read a standard format, at least without proprietary DRM to gum up the works. And ideally the IDPF will address the proprietary DRM problem as well.

Now, alas, as shown by the screenshot at the end of this post, Wikipedia gives the erroneous impression that the format’s .epub extension is proprietary. So I can hardly blame Gerry Manacsa, one of the main brains behind the Wowio site, for sharing the confusion or at least not sufficiently distinguishing the format from software possibilities. Gerry tells us, furthermore, that he actually likes Digital Editions less than he does the existing Adobe Reader.

The bottom line at Wowio

And that’s one of the reasons Gerry hopes that Wowio for now will stick to the existing PDF format. He’s speaking strictly for himself, not Wowio, but considering his job, I’m not exactly getting my hopes up that Wowio will offer a PDF alternative soon. May I be wrong! I love Wowio’s mission of providing free, ad-supported books but would rather not have to bother with importing PDFs into Mobipocket Desktop. I’m now reading a free Wowio-posted book called Pirates: An Illustrated History and concluding that the RIAA would love it—given its depiction of some pirates as pure sadists (humor alert).

Just so Gerry knows, he’d do well to keep an eye on OSoft‘s dotReader (people at OSoft are keen to do ad-supported books), Mobipocket (supposed to support the IDPF format fully in the near future) and the off-line capabilities of Bookglutton.

For conspiracy theorists: Gerry’s wife, Karina, who’s made some intelligent comments to the TeleBlog on the promise of e-books for recreational reading, hopes to be writing soon for us. I hadn’t any idea of her relationship with Gerry when I recruited her. She alerted me to the connection and says she’ll avoid Wowio-related postings. Among Karina’s early posts will be one I requested on e-books use for K-12 in the Philippines.

And now–a screenshot of the item that the Wikipedia needs to rewrite: See for yourself.

Adobe item in Wikipedia

 
7