Archive for the ‘E-books’ Category

New SPEC Kit from the Association of Research Libraries Looks at E-Book Collections

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Note: The full text of SPEC Kit 313 is a fee-based document but the Table of Contents and Executive Summary (18 pages; PDF) are available at no charge. Ordering information is at the bottom of this page.

From the Announcement/Summary:

The Association of Research Libraries (ARL) has published E-book Collections, SPEC Kit 313, which examines the current use of e-books in ARL member libraries; their plans for implementing, increasing, or decreasing access to e-books; purchasing, cataloging, and collection management issues; and issues in marketing to and in usage by library clientele.

By the May deadline, responses had been submitted by 75 of the 123 ARL member libraries for a response rate of 61%. Of the responding libraries, 73 (97%) reported including e-books in their collections.

According to survey responses, most institutions entered the e-book arena as part of a consortium which purchased an e-book package. The earliest forays occurred in the 1990s but the majority of libraries started e-book collections between 1999 and 2004. Purchasing at the collection level allowed libraries to acquire a mass of titles with a common interface, reducing some of the transition pains to the new format. The downside of collections is that libraries find they are often saddled with titles they would not have selected in print; also, each collection might have a different interface, adding to user frustration.

Access the Table of Contents and Executive Summary (18 pages; PDF)

Source: The Association of Research Libraries (ARL)

On Piracy and E-Books

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

From a NY Times Article:

You can buy “The Lost Symbol,” by Dan Brown, as an e-book for $9.99 at Amazon.com. Or you can don a pirate’s cap and snatch a free copy from another online user at RapidShare, Megaupload, Hotfile and other file-storage sites.

[Snip]

Total e-book sales [according to the AAP], though up considerably this year, remained small, at $81.5 million, or 1.6 percent of total book sales through July.

[Snip]

Adam Rothberg, vice president for corporate communications at Simon & Schuster, said: “Everybody in the industry considers piracy a significant issue, but it’s been difficult to quantify the magnitude of the problem. We know people post things but we don’t know how many people take them.”

[Snip]

Free file-sharing of e-books will most likely come to be associated with RapidShare, a file-hosting company based in Switzerland. It says its customers have uploaded onto its servers more than 10 petabytes of files — that’s more than 10 million gigabytes — and can handle up to three million users simultaneously. Anyone can .upload, and anyone can download; for light users, the service is free. RapidShare does not list the files — a user must know the impossible-to-guess U.R.L. in order to download one***.

Ed Note. *** Not so fast. We did just two or three minutes of searching using general purpose search engines and noticed that there are numerous keyword search tools to find and access content from the RapidShare database. They appear to be from third parties. Sometimes they’re not easy to use (of course, we didn’t test them all) and you’ll need the right tools to decompress certain file formats. But the point is that these search databases are available. After some brief testing of the four engines listed below, it appears that each RapidShare search engine is not tapping the complete RapidShare database since we received considerably different results from each search tool.

Four examples (we found more) are:

+ Rapid Library
+ RapidQueen
+ Rapid-Share-Search-Engine
+ RapidShareSearch.com

[Snip]

At my request, Attributor, a company based in Redwood City, Calif., that offers publishers antipiracy services, did a search last week to see how many e-book copies of “The Lost Symbol” were available free on the Web. After verifying that each file claiming to be the book actually was, Attributor reported that 166 copies of the e-book were available on 11 sites. RapidShare accounted for 102.

Much More in the Complete Article

Source: NY Times

The e-text debate: Grand Valley State U. students, faculty weigh in

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

From the Article:

Digital books also cannot be re-sold once users are through reading them. Another concern is the Kindle is the only device with a keyboard for taking in-text notes.

In addition to online reading devices, some textbooks are available for purchase as computer downloads. Tools such as Blackboard and e-reserve also allow professors to post readings online.

However, some GVSU professors feel online textbooks and reading devices may not be the best choice for academic reading.

“I do not think they are helpful for most classes,” Biology Professor Robert Hollister said of online textbooks. “Maybe I am old-fashioned, but I find it tiring to read a computer screen … The more interactive, in my opinion, the more useful on the computer. Simply reading a textbook online seems silly and a waste of potential.”

Philosophy professor Kelly Parker said many students still choose to print out online readings, which could be as expensive and resource-consuming as a traditional textbook.

“I mark up the pages, write notes in the margins (and) slap sticky notes on (my books),” Parker said. “The printed page and my pencil are part of my mind when I’m reading these things.”

But he added he would be interested in reading magazines, newspapers and some reference texts on a portable device.

[Snip]

But others, such as geography and planning professor Elena Lioubimtseva, have fully embraced online textbooks and materials.
(more…)

e-Books: Why the Digital Revolution is Missing the Big Picture

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

From the Column by Author, Jason Pinter:

Books are not meant to be chopped up and consumed in pieces. You don’t read one chapter of the new James Ellroy, and then flip to Margaret Atwood’s latest and back again. Books to many are fixtures: permanent and tangible beyond the word themselves…

[Snip]

I’ve downloaded numerous free e-reader apps for my iPhone (and even bought a few books for them), but other than killing a little time on the subway I haven’t read more than fifty pages in total. As a publishing obsessive, worried to death about the state of reading given the onslaught of entertainment that embraces exploitation and ignorance over any sort of wit or nuance, my grandest hope is that e-readers bring in that coveted demographic which currently seems to embrace the printed word only to the extent that they skim the captions beneath a photo of a bikini-clad Kim Kardashian.

[Snip]

Ebooks should look to expand the book buying market, not be used as an alternative for the print edition. Look at the ads for the iPod: they’re fun, they’re cool, they feature all sorts of (pastel-colored) people who are far funkier than anyone you or I know grooving to the licensed beat. Then consider the ads for the Kindle: the music is straight out of your local elevator. Hesitant readers aren’t going to rush out to spent $299 to listen to the reading equivalent of John Tesh.

Much Much More in the Complete Column

Note: When this item was first posted The Huffington Post incorrectly attributed the piece to Jessie Kunhardt, a Huffington Post’s Books Intern. On Friday afternoon, the attribution was corrected and a new url generated. The old url also redirects to the new one.

Source: The Huffington Post

The Most Downloaded eBooks and Audiobooks From the Library for September, 2009 (via OverDrive)

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

Some info from e-book provider Overdrive.

The ‘Most Downloaded Books from the Library’ for September 2009 was Dan Brown’s international bestseller “The Lost Symbol” [which] became the most downloaded audiobook and eBook in its first month of release. Popular titles from James Patterson, Nora Roberts, and Charlaine Harris also moved up on the eBook adult fiction listing. Audiobooks and eBooks by Malcolm Gladwell, Lisa Kleypas, and Stephenie Meyer were also among the most downloaded books from OverDrive-powered libraries last month.

The complete list can be accessed here showing the Top 10 in each category.

Here’s the top eBook or audiobook in each category.

+ Download Audiobooks – Adult Fiction
The Lost Symbol, by Dan Brown (Books on Tape)

+ Download Audiobooks – Adult Nonfiction
Outliers, by Malcolm Gladwell (Hachette Audio)

+ Download Audiobooks – Juvenile Fiction
Twilight, by Stephenie Meyer (Listening Library)

+ Download Audiobooks – Juvenile Nonfiction
Night, by Elie Wiesel (Audio Bookshelf,LLC)

+ Download eBooks – Adult Fiction
The Lost Symbol, by Dan Brown (Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group)

+ Download eBooks – Adult Nonfiction
Blink, by Malcolm Gladwell (Little, Brown and Company)

+ Download eBooks – Juvenile Fiction
Eclipse, by Stephenie Meyer (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers)

+ Download eBooks – Juvenile Nonfiction
Three Cups of Tea, by Greg Mortenson (Penguin USA, Inc.)

The ‘Most Downloaded Books from the Library’ lists are organized by subject and format, and compiled based on activity at more than 9,000 libraries in the OverDrive global network.

Source: OverDrive

e-Books: New Initiative Offers Florida College Students Free Digital Versions of Pricey Textbooks

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

From the Story:

But through a new initiative state university system officials plan to announce today [9/24], Florida college students can get digital versions of some of those pricey textbooks for free. Students who really want a print version can order one custom-bound for between $30 and $50 — far cheaper than even many used textbooks.

The project, dubbed Orange Grove Texts Plus, is a partnership involving the University Press of Florida, the state university system’s nonprofit publishing arm; the Virginia publisher Integrated Book Technology; and Orange Grove, the state’s digital database of K-20 teaching material.

So far 124 titles covering a range of subject areas are available digitally, with more being added as scholarly authors sign on to the project. The goal: reduce college students’ annual textbook tab, which can run in excess of $1,200.

The move appeals not just to students’ pocketbooks, but to their tech-savvy nature. They already listen to course lectures on iPods and use sites like Blackboard.com, where professors post practice quizzes and other course material. So why not textbooks, too?

“The concept of this is more important here than the number of volumes we have right now,” chancellor Frank Brogan said. “Over time we can get more and more authors and more and more publishers — and then that gives students a better menu to choose from.”

The Orange Grove initiative comes as major textbook publishers are beginning to offer a significant portion of their books in digital form, even though e-textbooks still represent just a small portion of the $7-billion-a-year industry’s revenues.

CourseSmart, a spinoff company started by major textbook publishers, currently sells more than 7,300 titles that students can read on their computers or iPhones. And Amazon is supporting an e-textbook experiment with seven universities, including Princeton, to evaluate the use of e-textbooks.

Much More in the Full Text Article

Learn More via the Orange Grove Text Plus Web Site

Source: St. Petersburg Times
Hat Tip: The Wired Campus

In-Depth Reviews of Four Scholarly e-Book Services

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Yesterday, at the bottom of this post we included a “see also” link about the ACLS (American Council of Learned Societies) Humanities E-Book database. This subscription database includes over 2,200 full-text titles from over 100, “contributing publishers, and librarians at the University of Michigan’s Scholarly Publishing Office.” Today, a bit more about this database and several others.

The September issue of Reviews in History via the The Institute of Historical Research in London offers reviews of four scholarly e-book services.

All four of the e-Book services were reviewed by Mark Herring, Winthrop University. They’re in-depth looks at each product (we’re providing only a snippet) and we strongly suggest reading the complete review.

First, Gutenberg-e

From the Review

Gutenberg-e (not to be confused with the Gutenberg Project) began as a program of the American Historical Society (AHA) and Columbia University about a decade ago. It successes and failures are a thumbnail (no pun intended) sketch of the larger electronic publishing enterprise. Gutenberg-e is the brain trust of Princeton’s magisterial and irrepressible Robert Darnton, former president of the AHA, who proposed to address the problem of high production costs of publishing monographs by sponsoring the production of electronic books on the Internet. His ‘A Program for Reviving the Monograph’ is required reading. Darnton conceived of a program in which electronic texts would get the same scrutiny as traditional scholarly publishing, but fashioned in such a manner to match or exceed in scope and enterprise their printed cousins, owing to the flexibility allowed by the Web. After fits and starts, Gutenberg-e is the partial (more about that later) fulfillment of that proposal, one that drew upon the resources of Columbia University Press and the Mellon Foundation to succeed. Some might argue that Gutenberg-e traded the high print monograph production costs for an even higher electronic production cost on the Web. Each of the 36 texts cost about $60,000 to produce.

[Snip]

Gutenberg-e provides scholars and other readers with easy access to 36 of the finest dissertations written in the last half decade or so. One can and should mourn the inability to keep it afloat. But financial stability has always dogged e-texts and will continue to do so. If historical monographs are in real trouble, and humanities monographs in general slipping the way of all flesh, I don’t think anything online will save them. What will save them will be what always has: excellent writing and flawless research.

Second, Humanities E-Books

From the Review

Enter Humanities-e Books (HEB for short), a site (http://www.humanitiesebook.org/index.html) maintained by the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS). HEB may give all digitizing naysayers a chance to utter a sigh of relief. Relief, because if journals are the perfect medium for electronic access, then HEB under the auspices of the ACLS, is an example of how to do everything other than journals right. The site grew out of a concern about humanities publishing raised by Richard Darnton among others. Something must be done, or so they felt. There had to be a way to save humanities publishing and produce a scholarly site. HEB may not have been exactly what he had in mind but it sure meets many of his earlier criteria!

The entire review is summarized on the Humanities e-Book Blog.

Third, Oxford Scholarship Online

From the Review

Whatever else one can say, the name ‘Oxford’ still has an evocative ring to it, a panache that is hard to beat, even if it does evoke a bit of that ‘jingo imperialism’ that the word might also bring to mind. Certainly in the world of books and bytes, the name of Oxford gives pause for due consideration. Oxford Scholarship Online (OSO), then, brings with it instant name recognition, an image of a raft of ingenious, glabrous men, all nodding with approval … or off to sleep, as the case may be. OSO ‘combines innovation with excellence’ we are told and brings to scholars and readers the complete texts of 2,763 titles from the austere and rightly revered and respected publishing house.(1) If that sounds a bit overblown, try this: the London School of Economics called the Oxford Scholarship Online, ‘the Holy Grail of online resources’. Library Journal’s netConnect contends that OSO is a ‘well-designed and easy-to-navigate environment. The quality features, sophisticated search functionality, and additional online content that Oxford University Press is providing are numerous, and the content speaks for itself’. You can be sure that when reviewers’ praise begins by invoking God’s grail, you know it’s got to be at least a solid, if not inerrant, resource.

[Snip]

OSO, meanwhile, will continue to thrive for the foreseeable future. Scholars looking for anything better will be very hard-pressed to find even a close second.

Fourth, Medieval Sources Online

From the Review

Medieval Sources Online (or as it appears most often, Medieval Sourcesonline) may not be the most newfangled of the newfangled digital offerings, but it is one of the most curious at first glance. Here is a field known for its laudator temporis acti, and yet here it is, in all its online glory. But a quick thought erases such nonsense. In another sense, medieval sources should have been online first, given their importance, as well as their variety and delight.(1) Furthermore, much of that age’s history, the hagiography, politics, religion and so on is fundamental to understanding everything else that follows.

Thankfully, the long-learned craft, our short lives, and our love of newfangledness all conspired to give us Manchester University Press’s Medieval Sources Online (MSO). Currently there are about three thousand pages of materials ‘annotated and edited to the high standard expected of a university press.’(2) Given that the press in question has more than 100 years of experience in creating such resources, scholars and students of the Middle Ages now have a primary source for teaching and research. New titles added to the series will be added to MSO following a two year embargo.

The content of MSO is not, when compared to other databases, very formidable. Indeed, one would not use the world formidable at all when describing the numeric content of MSO. As of August 2009, only 13 texts were available online…

[Snip]

In the interregnum, however, we can rejoice in sources like MSO because it does what the Web does, indeed, do so very, very well: it makes what may not yet have been known, known to all – at least for the time being.

Source: Reviews in History

E-Books: Princeton University: Kindles Yet to Woo University Users

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

From the Article:

When the University announced its Kindle e-reader pilot program last May, administrators seemed cautiously optimistic that the e-readers would both be sustainable and serve as a valuable academic tool. But less than two weeks after 50 students received the free Kindle DX e-readers, many of them said they were dissatisfied and uncomfortable with the devices.

On Wednesday, the University revealed that students in three courses — WWS 325: Civil Society and Public Policy, WWS 555A: U.S. Policy and Diplomacy in the Middle East, and CLA 546: Religion and Magic in Ancient Rome — were given a new Kindle DX containing their course readings for the semester. The University had announced last May it was partnering with Amazon.com, founded by Jeff Bezos ’86, to provide students and faculty members with the e-readers as part of a sustainability initiative to conserve paper.

[Snip]

“I hate to sound like a Luddite, but this technology is a poor excuse of an academic tool,” said Aaron Horvath ’10, a student in Civil Society and Public Policy. “It’s clunky, slow and a real pain to operate.”

[Snip]

Wilson School professor Stan Katz, who teaches Horvath’s class, said he is interested in whether he “can teach as effectively in using this as in using books and E-Reserve material and in whether students can use this effectively,” adding that “the only way to find out is to try it.”

[Snip]

“I have all of my books marked up,” Katz said. “Either I use my own annotations, or I take the time, an immense amount of time” to annotate with the Kindle.

Katz also said he has little incentive to move his annotations to the Kindle, explaining that he heard the University won’t use the Kindle next year and adding that he finds the device “hard to use.”

Katz also added that the absence of page numbers in the Kindle makes it more difficult for students to cite sources consistently.

“The Kindle doesn’t give you page numbers; it gives you location numbers. They have to do that because the material is reformatted,” Katz said. He noted that while the location numbers are “convenient for reading,” they are “meaningless for anyone working from analog books.”

See Also: ACLS Humanities E-Book (Subscription Database)

From the Site:

Humanities E-Book is a digital collection of 2,200 full-text titles offered by the ACLS [American Council of Learned Societies] in collaboration with nineteen learned societies, nearly 100 contributing publishers, and librarians at the University of Michigan’s Scholarly Publishing Office. The result is an online, fully searchable collection of high-quality books in the Humanities, recommended and reviewed by scholars and featuring unlimited multi-user access and free, downloadable MARC records. HEB is available 24/7 on- and off-campus through standard web browsers.

Some titles are available in XLM format while others can be printed on-demand.

Hat Tips: P.W. and P.B.

Read.gov Launches Today With Numerous Features

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

First publicly announced in this Library of Congress news release from September, Read.gov officially launches today.

The site comes by way of The Center for the Book at LC.

[You'll find] “resources from throughout the Library designed to encourage the reading of books and to interest users in learning about the authors and illustrators who create them.”

What follows are some Read.gov features that we noticed while reviewing the site and reading this blog post.

+ Read Classic Books (in their Entirety) Online
Move through a book page-by-page (forward or backwards) by simply clicking on the page you’re currently reading or looking at. The LC Book Reader also allows you to see facing pages, the option to go directly to a specific page, zoom (in and out), and the ability to view the book in “scroll” mode. At the moment books are available in two categories: Teens and Kids.

Some of the titles available today are: The Raven, A Christmas Carol, A Wonder-Book for Girls & Boys (Teens) and The Baby’s Own Aesop, Baseball ABC, Denslow’s Humpty Dumpty, Mother Goose Finger Plays, The Pied Piper of Hamelin, The Story of the Three Little Pigs, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, and The Wonders of a Toy Shop (Kids).

+ Episodic Reading: The Exquisite Corps Adventure

Our “Exquisite Corpse Adventure” works this way: Jon Scieszka, the National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature, has written the first episode, which is “pieced together out of so many parts that it is not possible to describe them all here, so go ahead and just start reading!” He has passed it on to a cast of celebrated writers and illustrators, who must eventually bring the story to an end.

Every two weeks there will be a new episode [a total of 26] and a new illustration. The story will conclude a year from now…”This story starts with a train rushing through the night….” No one knows where or how it will end!

+ Author Webcasts
More than 20 webcasts are currently available including presentations by: Steven King (and Family), R.L. Stine, David Baldacci, Jan Brett, Jane Goodall, Kay Ryan, Neil Gaiman, and Sara Paretsky.

+ Suggested Reading Lists

+ The Storybook Adventure Game

+ Local and Community Resources
Information about, “Book Fairs, Storytelling Festivals and Other Literary Events Across the U.S.A. and Around the World” and One Book Projects (By State or Country). Australia, Canada, and the UK have One Book Projects.

+ A New Online Book Club: Books and Beyond
Accessible via Facebook.

+ How to Stay Current With the Site and the Exquisite Corpse Adventure
Read.gov offers two RSS feeds or e-mail update lists.

1) Center for the Book and Read.gov (Center for the Book Activities and Read.gov Updates)
RSS ||| E-Mail

2) Exquisite Corpse Adventure (Notification when New Episodes Become Available)
RSS ||| E-Mail

This blog post by Matt Raymond has more including some comments by a member of the web development team.

Kudos to everyone at LC and the Center for the Book put this site together. We’re looking forward to more content and features. Well done!

Source: LC

See Also: When discussing digitized children’s books (as we did above) it’s important to mention the non-profit International Children’s Digital Library. It’s home to digitized books that you can read (full text online) in 16 languages, a very cool search interface, an iPhone app, and iGoogle Gadget.

Compare and Contrast eBook Readers with the e-Book-Reader-Guide

Friday, September 25th, 2009

On his Mobile Libraries blog, Gerry McKiernan from Iowa State University, alerts us to a cool site (free) that allows users to compare and contrast 10 eBook readers (U.S. Version) by way of a single table. Versions of the site for other parts of the world are available and linked below.

Here’s some of the data points e-Book-Reader-Guide offers on its home page:

+ Pictures of All Readers (Click the Image to See A Full Review* and Key Facts)

* One negative. We were unable find where the source of the several hundred word review.

+ Definitions of Ratings (Left side of page)

+ Star Ratings on Value, Features, and Usability

+ Screen Size/Greyscales

+ Connectivity

+ Memory

+ Battery

+ Weight

+ Audio

+ Input Device

+ Screen Refresh

+ File Formats Supported

+ Release Date

+ Notes and Price (You can also purchase right from this site).

You can also find tables for eBook readers available in the UK, Europe, Asia, Large eReaders, and Readers in Development.

You’ll also find an intro to readers (Basics) industry commentary, and a useful “What’s New” page.

Lots of useful information. However, not knowing where the info is coming from/who is running the site takes away from what would be an outstanding tool. Use with caution.

UK: Librarians Desperate For e-books as Demand Outstrips Supply, JISC Finds

Sunday, September 20th, 2009

From the Article:

University librarians are frustrated by the poor availability and high cost of electronic textbooks, despite growing demand from students and academic staff, the biggest-ever study of e-books has found.

So far, publishers have held back from releasing e-textbooks amid uncertainty about their impact on the market for printed texts, but the findings of the two-year study suggest that making more e-books available would not affect sales.

As part of the UK national e-book observatory project, run by the Joint Information Systems Committee, electronic versions of 36 textbooks were made available to 127 universities and colleges for a year. In that time, 46,000 visits were made and more than 761,000 pages were viewed. More than 50,000 university staff and students were surveyed.

Source: Times Higher Ed

See Also: Podcast from the UK:
Learn About the e-Books Observatory Project

See Also: National e-Books Observatory Web Site

See Also: Free Electronic Textbooks Do Not Hurt Print Sales, Report Says (via Wired Campus)

Cool Graphic of eBook Market

Saturday, September 19th, 2009

From the TechFlash Post by Eric Engleman:

The buzz around Amazon’s Kindle electronic reader has sparked growing interest in digital books, and the universe of players in this space is growing rapidly. New reading devices and content partnerships are announced on an almost weekly basis.

To keep track of it all, we here at TechFlash have mapped out the known universe of e-books – spanning content, devices, mobile apps, wireless providers, acquisitions, and more. We invite you to take a look, give us feedback, and let us know if we’ve missed anything. We’ll be updating this chart on a regular basis.

You can also download a PDF version of the map.

In case you’re wondering, content companies like ebrary, NetLibrary, The Internet Archive (Text), World Public Library and others aren’t on the list yet. Perhaps it’s time to contact Mr. Engleman?

Source: TechFlash (via Teleread)

Podcast from the UK: Learn About the e-Books Observatory Project

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

From the Summary:

For a year, 26 e-course texts across four subject areas (Medicine, Business, Engineering and Media Studies) were made available to 127 UK universities who took part in a National e-books observatory project funded by JISC and carried out by JISC Collections. The largest study of its kind, it has seen the behaviours of over 50,000 participants and observed to see how they use a selection of academic electronic textbooks.

In this podcast Rebecca O’Brien is joined by Caren Milloy, the project’s manager at JISC Collections, and her co-author of the National e-books Observatory Project report, Ian Rowlands from CIBER who carried out the study.

The podcast runs about 13 minutes.

Access the National e-Books Observatory Web Site

Source: JISC

Digital Bookmobile to Showcase eBooks at National Book Festival, September 26 in Washington, D.C.

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

From the Announcement:

As Americans spend an increasing amount of time online at home and connected through mobile devices, America’s libraries are engaging readers digitally with eBook and audiobook downloads. The Digital Bookmobile (www.digitalbookmobile.com) will showcase eBooks and other digital formats available 24/7 from America’s libraries with a unique exhibit at the 2009 National Book Festival on Saturday, September 26 in Washington, DC. The high-tech 18-wheeler, as part of a national tour, will feature download services available from more than 9,000 libraries worldwide. Visitors will be able to browse a library’s download website, sample eBooks, digital audiobooks, music and video on interactive PC and Mac computer stations, learn how to download, and, test compatible devices including the iPod, Zune, and Sony Reader.

The Digital Bookmobile (developed inside a 74-foot, 18-wheel tractor-trailer) has traveled 18,000 miles and hosted more than 150 events with 25,000 library patrons and staff in 28 states and Canadian provinces since launching its national tour in New York City in August 2008.

See Also: A full schedule of past events (with images) and upcoming stops is available here.

See Also: Follow the Digital Bookmobile’s national tour on Twitter (@digibookmobile) and Facebook.

Source: OverDrive

See Also: National Book Festival Updates from the Library of Congress via SMS/Text Message

See Also: From OverDrive: Are You Ready for Wireless Downloads of Audiobooks? Simply Download Over-the-Air

E-books Catching on With Readers

Monday, September 14th, 2009

From the Article:

Key developments in displays are improving e-book reading devices, whether it be E Ink’s displays in products like the Sony Reader and the Kindle, or the easy on the eyes organic light emitting diode (OLED) screens being used in netbook computers and smartphones. Up-and-coming technology promises to enhance e-book reading even further.

Low-power, reflective e-paper displays, which can be read in direct sunlight, are expected to hit the market in the next year from companies like Prime View International and Plastic Logic, said Nick Colaneri, director of the Flexible Display Center at Arizona State University.

[Snip]

“The U.S. wholesale e-book market was about $50 million in 2008 (retail would be about double), but it’s growing exponentially,” McGuire said, citing figures from the International Digital Publishing Forum, a group that tracks the e-book market. McGuire said that in the first quarter of 2009, the wholesale market was about $25.8 million, an increase of 53 percent over the previous quarter

[Snip]

“I would expect 20 percent of book sales to be digital by 2014, but some have predicted an even bigger percentage by then,” he said. “Twenty percent of the current book market is something like $5 billion.”

Source: CNN

The Latest Buzz on Electronic Readers

Monday, September 14th, 2009

From the Article:

“E-readers keep evolving,” says Ms. [Jennifer] Colegrove [NPD Group's DisplaySearch Director], who tracks the market for light-reflective screens in devices such as Amazon.com Inc.’s Kindle. Within the next 18 months, color screens should arrive in more readers, she says. Yet the color technology from E Ink Corp. and Bridgestone Corp. that is closest to market has a drawback: lower resolution and clarity.

“Consumers want to mark in their e-books just like they do in regular books,” says Ms. Colegrove. Companies including Sony Corp. already offer some basic touch capabilities on their e-readers, but new technology should improve the readability and enable both finger and pen touch at the same time. For now that technology, already used on some laptops, is expensive or still in development.

Source: Wall Street Journal

eBook Expert Andrew Savikas visits Nature, Talks on the Digital Future of Publishing

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

From a Blog Post by Timo Hannay:

Last Thursday, Andrew Savikas, VP of Digital Initiatives at O’Reilly Media and ebook expert, paid us a visit. We had some very interesting conversations about the future direction of publishing, and Andrew delivered a great talk on the topic. He kindly provided a copy of his slides (16MB PDF). My (partial and impressionistic) notes are below.

Notes from the Talk by Timo Hannay

Source: Nascent

1000 New Zealand Classics Released as eBooks

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

From the News Story:

New Zealanders can now freely download—and store in their pockets—hundreds of our most well-known books, courtesy of Victoria University’s New Zealand Electronic Text Centre (NZETC).

More than 1000 New Zealand electronic books (eBooks) are now available for download on the NZETC website at http://www.nzetc.org, giving people easy access to some of the great works in New Zealand literature including Katherine Mansfield’s The Garden Party and Other Stories, Bill Pearson’s Coal Flat, and Robin Hyde’s The Godwits Fly.

[Snip]

The New Zealand eBooks, made available using the major emerging ePub standard, represent many of the texts already accessible for online browsing on the NZETC website, and are suited to viewing on modern eBook devices such as the iPhone, Sony Reader, and IRex ILiad.

Access the eBook Collection

Source: Scoop

eBooks: Asus Claims they Will Make the World’s Cheapest Digital Reader

Monday, September 7th, 2009

From the Article

The world of ebooks is about to start a new chapter with the arrival of the cheapest digital reader on the market. Asus, one of the world’s biggest consumer electronics businesses, confirmed last week that it is planning to shake up the market in the same way it did when it launched the first netbook — the low-cost alternative to the laptop.

Asus claims its ebook reader will be cleverer and more versatile than the current crop available from companies such as Sony and Amazon. It aims to unveil the device before the end of the year, according to Jerry Shen, the company’s president — and it may not be just one device, either.

[Snip]

Unlike current ebook readers, which take the form of a single flat screen, the Asus device has a hinged spine, like a printed book. This, in theory, enables its owner to read an ebook much like a normal book, using the touchscreen to “turn” the pages from one screen to the next. It also gives the user the option of seeing the text on one screen while browsing a web page on the other.

Source: The Sunday Times

See Also: Asustek to launch e-book reader under Eee family (via DigiTimes)

eBooks in Australia: Books will survive, but not on paper

Monday, September 7th, 2009

From the Article:

…I approached the director of the Melbourne Writers Festival to discuss Australia Council support for the Digital Publishing Program. With the commercial success of the Kindle in the US and publishers in Britain already squabbling over royalty rates for e-books, it is essential for Australian publishers to be ready to go when this technology arrives in our stores.

The period of transition from book to e-book will be particularly hard for our smaller publishing houses. Setting a manuscript in user-friendly digital format is not simply a matter of pressing a few buttons.

[Snip]

Paradoxically, I believe that those who have already gone to an all digital output, investing in skills and technology rather than paper, have more chance of keeping pace with their more powerful rivals. It’s the cost of putting out simultaneous online and paper versions of a book that will put some companies out of business.

It is equally important for writers to stay in touch with the complex field of digital rights management and subsequent royalty payments. Random House UK is in trouble for setting digital royalty rates below other publishers. Random is quoting 17.5 per cent to 20 per cent as a norm, while the original rate had been set at 25 per cent.

Source: The Australian