Friday, June 24, 2011

BlackBerry PlayBook Tablet to Cost $300


John Jackson, an analyst from CSS Insight, estimates that the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet announced by RIM recently will cost $300 – $350, though RIM hasn’t said anything about price point yet. Regardless, anything under $400 would be an aggressive price point and compete with the Samsung Tab’s rumoured subsidized $300 pricetag, and the bare minimum $500 you would be pay for an iPad.

The BlackBerry PlayBook tablet is RIM’s first smartphone companion device, rocking HDMI-out, twin 1 GHz processors, 1 GB of RAM, a 7-inch 1024 x 600 touchscreen, a 3 megapixel forward-facing and 5 megapixel rear-facing camera (both capable of HD video capture), and a new operating system from QNX that specializes in stability and multimedia. Take a look at our eyes-on tour of the PlayBook to scope out the hermetically-sealed hardware.

If you’re hankering to pick one up, the BlackBerry PlayBook should be available in Q1 2011.

Barnes & Noble Updates NOOK™ for Android™ App, Gives Tablet Users Access to Largest Digital Periodical Offering on Android

Android Central
sourceAndroid Market, BusinessWire

More than 140 NOOK Newsstand™ Titles Including Interactive Magazines with Exclusive ArticleView™ Now Available to Android Tablet Customers

Optimized Reading Experience for Most 7-Inch and Larger Tablets Including Honeycomb

Free App Now Available in Android Market, V CAST Apps, Samsung Apps, GetJar, and AppsLib

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Barnes & Noble, Inc. (NYSE: BKS), the world's largest bookseller, today announced an updated version of its popular, free NOOK for Android eReading application that brings the most comprehensive selection of digital periodicals to customers with Android™ tablets including more than 140 top magazine and newspaper brands from ESPN The Magazine and The Economist to Food & Wine and Us Weekly. To take advantage of large and extra large, high-resolution Android tablet screens, NOOK for Android now offers customers an optimized library grid view and reading experience with enhanced book margins and line spacing, as well as an improved shopping experience and more. The new app features are available for popular 7-inch and larger tablets using Android OS 2.1 and higher (Honeycomb).

Today's announcement marks the largest digital newsstand offering for Android tablet customers to date, with more than 140 of the best daily, weekly and monthly periodicals, all optimized for high-resolution displays in rich color. Barnes & Noble's interactive NOOK Magazine™ experience, previously available only to NOOK Color™ Reader's Tablet™ customers, is now available to the Android tablet community, featuring more than 120 popular titles such as Esquire, Maxim, Men's Health, Rolling Stone, Newsweek, Popular Science, PC Magazine, Elle, O, The Oprah Magazine, Travel + Leisure and many more. NOOK for Android customers with large tablets can also enjoy favorite NOOK Newspapers™ including USA Today, The Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post and The Chicago Tribune. All can be enjoyed with a 14-day free trial, via subscription or purchased in single issue form.

With NOOK for Android on larger tablets, magazine reading is easy and engaging with full-color pages in landscape and portrait mode, and Barnes & Noble's exclusive ArticleView technology (formerly available only on NOOK Color) which features only the article's text, customized to the reader's favorite style, on a central panel on the display. NOOK Magazines also feature a universal, easy-to-use reading experience with a slider to jump to the desired page, pinch and zoom to enlarge images and more.

"With our free, updated NOOK for Android application, we're delivering customers with Android tablets a great optimized reading experience and access to the largest ever collection of interactive magazines, as well as top newspapers, all optimized for high-resolution displays," said Jamie Iannone, President of Digital Products at Barnes & Noble. "Using their Android tablets, customers can enjoy our collection of more than two million digital books, as well as their morning paper and latest magazines, delivered right to their device through their NOOK for Android app, for an amazing periodical experience which includes our innovative ArticleView feature."

NOOK Newsstand and the optimized book reading experience on NOOK for Android will be available for customers using 7-inch and larger Android OS 2.1 and higher (Honeycomb) tablets with 800 x 480 (160 DPI or less) or higher screen resolution, and include Samsung Galaxy Tab™, Motorola XOOM™, LG G-Slate™ and ARCHOS internet tablets, among others. NOOK for Android customers on smartphones will also enjoy minor performance enhancements.

NOOK for Android gives customers with Android smartphones and tablets access to Barnes & Noble's expansive NOOK Bookstore™, one of the world's largest digital content catalogs, with the most NOOK Books™ priced at $9.99 or less. As part of Barnes & Noble's promise to "Read What You Love, Anywhere You Like™," customers can enjoy NOOK Books from their Barnes & Noble digital library on their NOOK Color, NOOK eReader devices and mobile and computing devices using free NOOK eReading software or apps.

Expanded App Availability

To make it easy for Android smartphone and tablet customers to find and download the free NOOK for Android app, Barnes & Noble has expanded availability for the free app to include Android Market, V CAST Apps from Verizon Wireless, Samsung Apps, GetJar, and AppsLib, with more to come. NOOK for Android will also be pre-loaded or made available in future firmware upgrades for some of the current leading and highly anticipated Android tablets coming to market. Customers can learn more about NOOK for Android v2.6.1 at www.bn.com/nookforandroid.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

ePub 3 Book using HTML5, CSS3 and Javascript


Walrus Epub demo #3 from Walrus Books on Vimeo.

Repost from http://vimeo.com/24954073

"Here it is! The new video demo made by the Walrus studio, involving ePub3 with a huge use of HTML5, CSS3 and Javascript. The book shown here is a digital collaboration project with french publisher MNEMOS, who published the original book : « KADATH, the guide of the unknown city » and for whom we do the digital development. Walrus invents every day the book of tomorrow! Music is by Jiminy Panoz."

Thursday, June 16, 2011

The Nook Nails It (A Wired Review)

By now, most everyone in your circle of friends has played with a Kindle and an iPad. Fewer have picked up a Nook. But I’d urge you to give this dark horse a shot.
I’ve been testing the newest black and white version of Barnes & Noble’s e-reader, and, well, you can color me impressed.

The freshly-updated Nook is smaller and lighter than Amazon’s Kindle, and on those qualities alone it stands a excellent chance of capturing some more market share in the e-ink device game. But the new Nook also embraces social media sharing (and does it well enough), eliminates all buttons save a “Home” key (where’d they get that idea?) and ambidextrous page-turners, and introduces a responsive e-ink touchscreen that controls an intuitive interface.

The Wi-Fi versions of both Amazon’s and Barnes & Noble’s similar-sized black and white e-readers are priced at $140, though Amazon does sell a cheaper, ad-supported Kindle for $114.
As much as the new Nook implores you to choose it over the Kindle, Amazon’s device isn’t its real adversary. Both devices share a common enemy: the tablet. iPads and Honeycombs and other touchscreen devices that can be used not only to read books, but watch videos, browse the web, mow your lawn and whatever else.

As my Wired colleague Brian X. Chen writes in his new book, Always On, “Soon, manufacturers will no longer be able to sell single-function gadgets lacking an internet connection because those gadgets will be obsolete.” (For fans of meta, I read this passage on the Nook).

So the killer app (pun intended) for any e-reader has to be that it makes you forget there are other ways to read digital books that don’t make you to lug around yet another device that only does one thing. As a lover of e-reading who’s never considered owning an e-reader, I was going to be a tough sell. And while I have some issues with the Nook, it is the first e-reader I would consider owning.

Why? The Nook is the first mechanism that has called me to read books for fun in ages. Software apps for e-reading are convenient, but they run on devices which are either too small (a smartphone) or too cumbersome and heavy (a tablet). This particular reader just feels better in the hand than others I have tried.

It’s not perfect. The touchscreen keyboard is merely adequate, but it’s fine for the little amount of typing you’ll do. And the Nook’s social layer seems like a work in progress, but it’s positioned only as a natural extension of the reading experience and does not feel at all forced.

But you spend the vast majority of your time using an e-reader for one thing alone: reading. It doesn’t need to be fancy, it needs to be comfortable, convenient, and accessible. At all those things, the Nook excels.

The newest Nook is so thin and light — about seven ounces, four less than its predecessor — that it’s really like carrying nothing at all. It’s not that much smaller than the Kindle, but at this scale, the difference is very noticeable. Most of the saving comes from using a pop-up touchscreen keyboard instead of a hardware keyboard. It fits comfortably in the back pocket of a pair of pants (not that you’d carry it that way) and I actually “lost” it in my very compact Booq laptop bag.

It’s easy to hold in any position, especially the all-important standing-on-the-moving-train and lying-in-bed varieties. The page-turning buttons are low-profile strips on either side of the face of the device, rather than the edge, as is the case with the Kindle. That seems to make it more natural to hold in one hand, since the entire edge of device can be cradled without any accidental clicks.

The touchscreen introduces some quirks. It’s easier to lose your place — I clicked on a footnote, and then something else accidentally, and landed on a random page, completely lost and with no idea what page I came from. It needs a way to retrace your steps. The touch keyboard is good enough to tap type, but the cancel button is too big. Clumsy fingers will lead to a lot of re-dos.

One other hardware quibble: The Nook is an e-ink reader, and like other e-ink readers, it is almost useless in low light. As one who has vowed to never again buy an Itty-Bitty Book Light, I’d happily give up some of the device’s two-month power surplus for a bit of on-demand LED glow. Tablets may be difficult to read in sunlight, but in low light, they still win.

In addition to the software for buying books and managing purchases, the Nook offers the three biggest sharing platforms: e-mail, Facebook and Twitter. You can link your Facebook, Twitter and Gmail accounts, and from there, recommend books to your friends and boast about your progress. If you’d like, you can also build a network of Nook friends by leveraging your Google contacts.

It’s refreshing that everything connects flawlessly on the backend, but the software clients flounder.
You can’t search your contacts when you want to e-mail — you have to scroll through them, which is ridiculous if you have a bulging address book.

When posting a tweet or a Facebook status message about a book, the Nook also throws in a link to the book’s selling page on Barnes & Noble’s website no matter what you write — fair enough, though if you want to trash what you’re reading, that hardly seems like a prime selling opportunity. Also, it is impossible to edit what the Nook “writes” when you’re broadcasting your progress. The full title of the Always On is 89 characters when you include the subtitle, and the “authors” are listed as Brian Chen and Brian X. Chen (spoiler alert: it’s one guy). And there’s nothing you can do about it. At least let me work in the author’s Twitter @handle.

Overall, the social component is half-baked. It aspires to do the quick hit things you might spontaneously want to do — “I’m halfway through!” — in the context of your reading experience, but it can’t compete with the social capabilities of your other mobile devices.

But hey, the Nook is for reading, not for tweeting. This is a pricey gadget that’s competing with a free app — like the Kindle, there are free Nook apps for phones and tablets — and as such, it has to offer a kickass reading experience. And it does.

It seems likely to win many new converts who’ve found themselves lured into Barnes & Noble’s brick-and-mortar retail stores to play with the device. The Kindle may have the first-mover advantage and a better-known name. But with this new version, the Nook is poised to break away — at least until the tablet makers build an e-reading experience good enough to render e-ink devices like these obsolete.
WIRED Nothing here gets in the way of a good read. Six-inch e-ink screen is crisp. Epic battery life. Hardware design eases one-handed operation. B&N sells over two million Nook books — more than twice what Amazon offers for the Kindle, which is just shy of a million titles.

TIRED Low light is a problem. Touch screen could be better. Social tools are meh, and the e-mail client is especially weak. Until e-book readers cost significantly less than $100 they won’t be everywhere — razors exist to sell blades.

Saturday, June 11, 2011

HTML5 and ePub3

With the introduction of ePub 3, a lot of people are wondering, well... what does that mean. Part of the newly released specifications for ePub 3 state that it must support HTML5. This means eBooks will soon be able to capitalize on a lot of new and fancy interactive potential.

Please use Safari or Chrome to visit these HTML5 sites.





To see examples of what HTML5 can do, click these sample links from around the web

Sample 1 Interactive Canvas
Sample 2 Animation
Sample 3 CSS3 Animation
Sample 4 Drag and Drop, On and Off
Sample 5 CSS3 Interface
Sample 6 Games
Sample 7 Samples
Sample 8 Colorful Canvas
Sample 9 Painting

Britannica Publishes E-Books for Schools, Libraries; Titles On Hundreds of Subjects Now Available


Chicago, IL (PRWEB) June 09, 2011
Students in elementary school through college can easily access hundreds of high-quality books on the subjects they're studying through a new Web-based e-books service available to schools and libraries from Britannica Digital Learning.


The new service, at ebooks.eb.com, makes it easier than ever to use Britannica's expert-written single-volume titles for research, papers, homework and projects. More than 300 non-fiction digital books are now available. They cover the full range of curriculum, including math, science, language arts, social studies and health.  

Each e-book contains the entire text of the print edition and illustrations - many of which are striking, high-definition and full-color. Tables of contents, indexes and glossaries are hyperlinked and fully searchable.

"These books are extremely valuable in digital form. They can be searched by several students at once, making them more accessible and useful than a single bound book," said Michael Ross, senior vice president and general manager of Britannica Digital Learning.

E-books are whiteboard ready, making them ideal for use both in small classrooms and large lecture halls. Schools do not have to spend additional funds on reading devices; these e-books can be accessed 24/7 by students, teachers, and library patrons through any Web connection. All titles in a school's or library's holdings can be searched with a single keyword. Password-protected notes can be saved and the material can be printed.

Britannica plans to add hundreds of additional e-book titles in the next few years. The first 15 pages of each title are available free at ebooks.eb.com. Pricing, titles and more are available at 1-800-621-3900.
About Britannica Digital Learning Britannica Digital Learning (BDL) is a division of Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc., providing reliable, high-quality classroom products and solutions for educators. BDL experts produce curriculum-correlated products for all ages from preschool to college that make creative of use of classroom technologies-such as interactive whiteboards and student-response devices-making it easier for teachers to teach and for students to learn. Products include Britannica SmartMath, Pathways: Science, Britannica Online School Edition and Image Quest. More information is available at info.eb.com or 1-800-621-3900. The company makes its headquarters in Chicago.



Friday, June 10, 2011

Now You Can Doodle in Google Ebooks

re-posted from http://www.pcmag.com/

Google knows that its Google Doodlers aren't the only ones who love to doodle; we do too. As a result, Google on Thursday introduced a new feature called "Doodle Mode," which lets you draw with a virtual crayon on a select group of Google ebooks.To get started, you'll need to purchase one of the Doodle Mode compatible ebooks from "The Everything Kids" series, which include puzzles, mazes, hidden pictures, and various activities.


After opening up your ebook of choice in the Google eBooks Web Reader and selecting "Doodle Mode" from the upper-right hand menu, you can start drawing.Google notes that although the Web Reader works in all modern browsers and lets you read Google ebooks without having to download them, Doodle Mode does not yet work with Internet Explorer.After clicking in the box with your mouse, you can start drawing with your virtual crayon. You can draw whatever picture you want or follow along with activities, completing puzzles and mazes.Basically, Doodle Mode turns ebooks into the coloring and activity books that we all grew to love during childhood. However, you don't have worry about making a mistake or filling up the pages too quickly; doodles aren't saved, so you can doodle and re-doodle again and again. If you do create a masterpiece that you'd like to keep, though, you can take screenshot or photo to preserve it.

To encourage kids to be creative and imaginative, Google also holds a yearly Doodle 4 Google competition, in which kids submit their very own Google Doodles. This year's winner, California second grader Matteo Lopez, had his space-themed doodle featured on the Google homepage on May 20. Google has produced some particularly fantastic and innovative doodles lately. In fact, Google announced that the playable Les Paul Google Doodle that graced its homepage yesterday will remain on Google.com in the U.S. for another day, by popular demand. We here at the PCMag offices loved playing with the doodle so much that Chris Phillips, our creative director and an actual musician, decided to create directions so readers could use the doodle to play the Beatles' "Here Comes the Sun."

Kobo Planning eBook Lending and Self-Publishing Service

re-posted from http://goodereader.com/blog/electronic-readers/kobo-planning-ebook-lending-and-self-publishing-service/

We (goodereader.com) talked with the CEO of Kobo Michael Serbinis recently at Book Expo New York and he dropped some bombshells on new plans for his company later on this year. It seems Kobo is preparing both ebook lending and a portal for authors to submit their own ebooks to be listed in the Kobo ebook store.

Kobo has been one of the darlings of the ebook and e-reader industry with 3 readers to their portfolio with the most recent Kobo Touch to be available soon. They also have an international bookstore with over 2.2 million books available in Canada, USA, Germany, Spain, Australia and more.

Kobo has big plans for 2011 with the advent of their new eBook lending program! eBook lending is a way that you can lend books to friends for up to 14 days, but only once. Two other companies right now offer ebook lending programs such as Amazon and Barnes and Noble. These two companies offer lending on select ebooks. Kobo although has not divulged all of their plans yet for the lending program, and said this is something they are working on and will implement by the end of the year.

Kobo also has plans for an independent author portal where authors can have their books listed in epub formats to be sold in the Kobo eBook store. This new program is comparable to rival programs such as Barnes and Noble PUBIT and the Amazon DTP. Kobo will be adding a new section to their book store for the titles that are self-published and will offer a conversion program for TXT, RTF, and DOC files to EPUB. I can foresee Kobo having a revenue sharing policy comparable to the other companies.
Kobo if anything has remained tremendously competitive in the ebook reader, ebook store, and e-reader application development scene. Their current iPad app Reading Life is heralded as the definitive application to read books and has raised the bar. It perfectly blends social media aspects along with statistics on your reading patterns.

In order for Kobo as a company rise to the next level and be on par with the biggest companies in the e-reader and ebook sphere, they have to implement ebook lending and a self-published program. These two facets puts them on even footing with their direct competition and provide separation from their emerging competition in other markets.


Thursday, June 9, 2011

Atria Books employs new smart phone technology to add digital experience to reading physical books

re-post from http://atriabooks.blogspot.com/2010/05/atria-books-employs-new-smart-phone.html

(FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE) The relationship between physical, paper-bound books and the digital realm is now closer than ever. In conjunction with the publication of a number of forthcoming titles from Atria Books, the publisher is employing a new smart phone technology that will provide readers with a digital experience to augment and enhance the physical book. “We’re pleased to introduce to book readers this readily available and up-to-the-minute technology that bridges a gap between the traditional book and digital life—and all it takes is the smart phone in your pocket,” said Judith Curr, Executive Vice President and Publisher of Atria Books and Washington Square Press.
Using Microsoft Tag, a new mobile barcode technology developed by the software company, Atria will begin rolling out books with a special bar code on the jacket or within the pages. Consumers, after downloading a free app at http://getTag.mobi to their phones, can then scan the Microsoft Tag using the camera on their phone bringing them to a web destination featuring bonus content, including video, author interview and exclusive excerpts and sneak previews.
Atria will debut the Microsoft Tag on a book jacket for the July 6th release of Stardust (left) by New York Times bestselling novelist Joseph Kanon, a gritty mystery set in post World War II Hollywood. The special bar code (see below) found in the bottom right-hand corner of the back cover will lead readers to a mini-documentary hosted by the author describing and visiting the Old Hollywood locals found in his book.
Microsoft Tag technology will also allow Atria Books to enhance static photo inserts that are featured in many celebrity memoirs. This fall, when Atria publishes Gold medal-winning Olympic speed skater Apolo Ohno’s autobiography, the book will include a video enhanced photo insert. Many of the photographs, which will depict specific races and Olympic moments will include bar codes that when scanned will take readers to videos that will bring those photographs to life.
“While some are rushing to find ways to take the physical book out of people’s hands and put the entire experience online, we’ve decided to take the internet and put it into the physical book,” Curr said.
In addition to book jackets and book interiors, Atria Books is using Microsoft TAG technology for consumer marketing and advertising. Recently, postcards with a Microsoft Tag (see below) linking to a trailer for From Capetown with Love starring author Blair Underwood were distributed on the “Fantastic Voyage” cruise hosted by radio personality Tom Joyner.
Then, in the July 26th issue of People Magazine (on newsstands July 16th) a full page advertisement for #1 New York Times bestselling author Jenifer Weiner’s new book Fly Away Home is scheduled to run with a Microsoft Tag that leads to the free sneak peak at the first chapter of the book.
Atria Books is the publisher of many major bestselling authors including Vince Flynn, Jodi Picoult, Jennifer Weiner, Brad Thor, T.D. Jakes, Shirley MacLaine, Zane, and Rhonda Byrne, author of the international bestseller, The Secret. Atria was also the initial publisher of The Vook, a new innovation in reading that blends a well-written book, high-quality video and the power of the Internet into a single, complete story.
Atria Books is an imprint of Simon & Schuster, a part of CBS Corporation. Simon & Schuster is a global leader in the field of general interest publishing, dedicated to providing the best in fiction and nonfiction for consumers of all ages, across all printed, electronic, and audio formats. Its divisions include Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing, Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing, Simon & Schuster Audio, Simon & Schuster Online, and international companies in Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom. For more information, visit our website at www.simonandschuster.com