More on TechnologyTell: Gadget News | Apple News
-
Free e-books
1st Ad
Comments
"@Karel Rei it's the second link on the results page (does take a while to process for those bigger files, though if you provide your email ..."Dmitry on "FB2 to PDF conversion for Kindles and other ereaders - Posted on February 14, 2012
"I guess Amazon will discover how long it's taking me to read Moby Dick! ..."C. Bailey Sims on "How Publishers Misunderstand Kindle, by Ted Striphas - Posted on February 14, 2012
"I agree with MarylandBill, I think most super bookworms have already purchased at least one eInk reader, they would have been the early adapters, not ..."Common Sense on "Is the tablet killing the ereader? - Posted on February 14, 2012
"I have had a Kindle since V2, but I doubt Amazon knows a whole lot about my e-reading preferences. I think I've turned the wireless ..."Wendy on "How Publishers Misunderstand Kindle, by Ted Striphas - Posted on February 14, 2012
"@MarylandBill I read more than a novel a week (more like 3-4), and I find the tablet superior, still. But based on what I've been ..."Juli Monroe on "Is the tablet killing the ereader? - Posted on February 14, 2012
More Comments...
-
- Textbook Prices by CampusBooks.com
2nd Ad
-
Contact
PAUL BIBA is TeleRead's Editor. Reach Paul with news items or other TeleRead business at
pbiba at napco dot com.
ABOUT US |
ADVERTISE |
WRITE FOR TELEREAD |
ARCHIVES |
SHARE NEWS TIPS |
SITE MAP |
SUBSCRIBE TO RSS
SUBSCRIBE TO RSS
TeleRead is a website of North American Publishing Company (NAPCO)
- Target Marketing Group
- Publications & Resources
- Retail Online Integration
- Direct Marketing IQ (DMIQ)
- Book Business
- eMarketing & Commerce (eM+C)
- FundRaising Success
- Publishing Executive
- Target Marketing
- Events
- Gold Ink Awards & Banquet
- InterACT! Conference
- Publishing Business Conference & Expo
- Printing Impressions Group
- Publications
- Printing Impressions
- packagePRINTING
- Print Professional
- In-plant Graphics
- TeleRead
- Printing's Best Blogs
- Events
- Gold Ink Awards & Banquet
- InterACT! Conference
- Promotional Products
- Online Services
- Product Search
- Promo Inbox
- E-mail Newsletters
- Promo Marketing Headlines
- Promo Marketing Threads
- Distributor Publications
- Promo Marketing
- Target Marketing
- Print Professional
- End-Buyer Catalogs
- Essential Promotions
- Best Sellers
- Gift Guide
Copyright ©2012 | Gadgetell LLC & North American Publishing Company (NAPCO) | All Rights Reserved
1500 Spring Garden Street, 12th Floor | Philadelphia, PA19130USA | (215) 238-5300
Send Questions/Comments to webmaster@napco.com | Privacy Policy
1500 Spring Garden Street, 12th Floor | Philadelphia, PA19130USA | (215) 238-5300
Send Questions/Comments to webmaster@napco.com | Privacy Policy


According to 
Previous
Comments:
nook. lowercase. not Nook. nook. I will go on repeating this to my dying day. nook. try it, you’ll like it. language does not have to follow hard and fast rules. the nook people lowercased it on purpose. so did e.e. cummings. if you keep uppercasing Nook, i will start signing my name dan e. bloom
Paul, it’s funny, and I know it’s a minor case, almost every US newspaper and website CAPS the first N in nook, just because that’s the way most stylebooks and copydesks and editors think. So of course, it can be written out as “Nook” instead of “nook”. But funny, just today I was reading a story in the local Chinese-langauge newspaper here in Taiwan, APPLE DAILY, and the article in Mandarin was about the Kindle and the nook and the SONY Reader, and as is usual for Chinese-language snailpapers and websites, when they come to a foreign word, especially an untranslatble English word like BlackBerry, or Kindle, or noo, the editors spell the word out in roman letters, ABC-style, and in this article today, Kindle was CAPPED, as was SONY Reader, just like that, but nook was lowercased, as the Barnes and Noble logo says it should be. What does this mean? Nothing. Just a story from overseas where nook is lowercased.