More on TechnologyTell: Gadget News | Apple News
-
Free e-books
1st Ad
Comments
"Michael - I don't see the logic in your assertion. Publishers or writers can sell their titles for exactly the price they set for their ..."Howard on "OR Books publisher suggests ‘disintermediating Amazon’ by selling D2C - Posted on May 26, 2012
"D2C will stand little chance against the ease of a megastore (for customers) until contract clauses that ban authors/publishers from selling their ebooks for less ..."Michael W. Perry on "OR Books publisher suggests ‘disintermediating Amazon’ by selling D2C - Posted on May 26, 2012
"Catana - I agree. It is self evident imho. One solution is for Publishers to develop a joint venture platform to market and sell their ..."Howard on "OR Books publisher suggests ‘disintermediating Amazon’ by selling D2C - Posted on May 26, 2012
"What Amazon is selling is its ability to function like a bookstore. A place where customers can browse and buy without having to run around ..."Catana on "OR Books publisher suggests ‘disintermediating Amazon’ by selling D2C - Posted on May 26, 2012
"@Frank Lowney: The DOJ is only suing for *conspiracy* not for Agency pricing. They've made that very clear. They aren't suing Smashwords and the other ..."Felix Torres on "Apple submits filing insisting Amazon is the monopolist and Apple helped foster competition - Posted on May 26, 2012
More Comments...
-
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



Previous
Comments:
The simple fact is, the iPhone is just too expensive especially given the fact that it comes encumbered with a 2 year contract with AT&T. I sincerely hope Apple manage to come up with a better deal when they finally get around to launching this thing in Europe, otherwise it’s going to be relegated to a niche market. Plus it needs to get 3G added if it’s going to make the grade over here, too.
I bought one today. I will continue reading ebooks on either my Palm TX or Nokia N800, but if some form of ebook reader were made available for the phone, and it read Mobipocket format, I would jump on it. Having one device is, for me, always better than carrying two.
Paul: Congrats on your iPhone. If you have time, I’d love to read your further thoughts on the iPhone as an e-book machine )even if it doesn’t run Mobipocket now). How does the browser work with online books and other HTML files? And what do you think of the PDF viewer? Thanks. David
Right now I’m stuck because AT&T is having problems activating new iPhones. See my various posts at Palm Addict.
http://palmaddict.typepad.com/palmaddicts/
When I can use the phone I will certainly report back here as to the above. You mention some things I haven’t thought of.
My eyes get tired reading my Nokia 770, so I don’t think the iPhone is the way I would go. I need a bigger screen. Love the size of my eBookwise-1150, but it is currently being repaired.
I would LOVE one device for using the net, phone, reading ebooks and other useful tasks, but it seems like the market is just trying to make devices smaller and smaller. Some of the UMPCs coming out look interesting. I am especially interested in the ASUS eeePC 701. Read it here: http://linux.wordpress.com/2007/06/08/asus-presents-199-umpc-eeepc-701/
I picked up an iPhone Friday night and have had some time to play with it. It eliminates my _having_ to carry both a cell and a seperate PDA which is a major relief.
That said I will still use my Palm TX for reading ebooks. I still like the portability and the backlit screen on the Palm.
As far as the iPhone: I did a little testing and I can definitely read the web based versions of ebooks online at Manybooks. With unlimited data time on the iPhone service contract there is no reason I cannot read online and then just bookmark where I leave off in reading. I’m thankful Manybooks has web based ebooks, because I can see myself forgetting to take my Palm TX with me sometime and online reading will do in a pinch.
Of course you have to be within range of the ATT EDGE network to read online and the website has to be up and running so there are more links in the chain.
I probably wouldn’t buy an IPhone because (a) too expensive (I am not a phone person) (b) don’t like the way Apple locks up the format on their music downloads, which makes me a little suspicious of using their hardware – it breaks and you lose your files.
Am I right in thinking the internet speed is very slow on these in USA? We can already get very good speeds here in Australia on phones and other similar devices, so I can’t see people here putting up with slow connections just to own an IPhone.
AFAIK the iphone is more or less completely closed to 3rd party developers, making it impossible to make an e-book reader for it.
Marcus: I too wonder about these things. But Matt at least is talking about optimizing material within his site for the existing hardware-software configuration. Thanks. David
I own an iPhone and wouldn’t give it up. The only thing I miss on my Treo 650 is the eBook reader.
I think the iPhone, though brilliantly suited for reading, reflects the target audience — dancing people listening to their itunes.
I picked up an iPhone on Sunday, selected the browser, went to my Web site, and pulled up a technical paper in PDF. Read through the first couple of pages with no problems. Very impressive.
Bill
I’m dying to get an iPhone, but without some sort of viable book reader it would be but slag in my pocket. I read voraciously; often on airplanes which would make a web-based reader a virtual impossibility.
Even within existing readers and formats it’s always a challenge, certain books be available in one but not another; gawd help us if someone starts a new, proprietary reader just for the iPhone.
I guess I’m still in the minority as a PDA-reading-person. But once you try it you’ll never go back.
Fingers crossed….