What You’ve Been Missing On Twitter

September 20, 2009

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There isn’t a Twitter account specifically for this blog. The mikecane account is my all-Mike Cane channel. Which means interspersed with eBook items you’ll encounter tweets about the current corrupt monetary system, the general insanity of bestial humankind, and the rare TV show I’ve watched. I tried having one distinct Twitter account for a blog before and keeping track of what got posted where was driving me mad(der).

Also, I have Twitter Guidelines.

I highlighted one tweet up there. You do the rest of the math on that one for now.

The final tweet inspired(?) an excellent post by Alan Pritt that all of you should go read right now: STFU and Do It


The Coming Collapse Of eBook Prices

September 20, 2009

I doubt he read my post — Would A US$50 eBook Reader Be A Disaster? — which preceded his by over a week, but he comes to the same conclusion I did.

The price is right?

As I hovered over the buy now button [for the new Nick Cave digital book of The Death of Bunny Munro], I realised that what was stopping me was the price. $29.99 (in Australia). Now, I just dropped $38 in Borders for a paperback for my mum last weekend, so that price is in line with what Aussies pay for printed books. But I had also just bough Gangstar, a Grand Theft Auto clone for my iphone a few days previously. That game has already given me hours of (frustrating!) gameplay for the princely sum of $8.99. Not long ago I would have happily paid $50 for a Nintendo DS game, but my value expectation has been totally re-calibrated by the app store.

And then there’s this. Apple’s itunes LP format, introduced last week seems to open up a different approach to multimedia publishing. Whilst not an iphone app, Tyrese Gibson has released a itunes LP comic book which combines a graphic novel, multimedia elements and music. All for $1.99.

So it’s pretty clear that the there is a different pricing model at work in the itunes space – in fact most online spaces. In that realm, $30 for almost anything seems way out of sync – even if it’s a relative bargain in the printed book world.

Bold emphasis added by me.

What distresses me here is that Nick Cave’s work is not an eBook — it’s a digital book. It’s nine-hundred megabytes of material. And it includes an RSS component that will keep Cave fans in touch with news about him.

If he is unwilling to pay for all that — what does he think the comparable price of a lightly tarted-up text file (aka ePub) should be?

And what about everyone else now too?

Previously here:

Writer Nick Cave At NYC Barnes & Noble
How The Axis Of E Is Killing Publishing
The Continuing Horror Of ePub
Would A US$50 eBook Reader Be A Disaster?
The Devaluation Of The eBook
ePub: The Death Of The Index?
The eBook Cover Scandal
He Understands Something Is Missing
Where I Stand Now
The Axis Of E Book Holocaust
English-Subtitled Editis Smart Digital Book Video
The Issue Of eBook Pricing
Why eInk, ePub, And eBooks Will Fail
Dumb eBooks Must Die, Smart eBooks Must Live
ALL eInk Devices: BAD For eBooks!


Onyx Boox 60 eBook Reader Manual

September 19, 2009

January 31, 2010 update: I have placed the manual up on Google Docs. You no longer need to email me for it. Download it from here.

December 30, 2009 update: I’ve been informed by an owner that version 1.2 of the firmware now includes the manual.

UPDATE: This post has been getting a lot of traffic. Apparently this device shipped without the User Manual and the PDF download link is dead. I downloaded the manual when it was available. It is a 2.4MB PDF of 119 pages length. If you need it, email me and I will send it to you.

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Boox60 User Manual Version1.0 is available as a PDF at that page.

Hardware Specification
6″/ 8″/ 9.7″ E Ink® Vizplex® EPD display
Touch panel with full screen scribble
16-level grayscale
400MHz processor or above
128MB RAM or above
512MB Flash or above
USB 2.0 with OTG support
SD/MMC with SDIO & SDHC support
2.5mm Stereo Headphone Jack
Wi-Fi/CDMA 1XRTT/GPRS/3G (option)
1600mAh replaceable Li-ion battery

Features
Multiple languages support
Details/Thumbnail/List page view
Search and dictionary support
Text to speech (TTS) support
Font size & family change, Zoom in/out
Bookmark/Table of contents

Format Support
PDF/TXT/HTML/MOBIPOCKET/EPUB/CHM/PDB/JPG/PNG/GIF/BMP/TIFF/MP3/WAV
Additional formats support in the future

I’ve taken some of the screensnaps to display here.

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Click for more screensnaps


Seekrit Barnes & Noble eBook Reader

September 19, 2009

Engadget found an FCC filing. Aside from revealing it contains 802.11b/g, there’s a diagram [PDF link] that seems to display a battery compartment and SIM slot:

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Some people have speculated this is the back of the Plastic Logic reader. Yet this photo shows a clean back.

I’m wondering if we’re seeing the back of the new iRex eBook reader:

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New Hanwang eBook Reader: F21

September 19, 2009

HanwangF21

Hanwang puts these out like a stray cat has kittens.

Specifications

Dimensions
173mm × 117mm × 10.3mm

Display
5-inch electronic paper display (EPD); 8-order gray; ratio of 4:3; resolution 800 * 600

Storage
4G TF card (maximum support 8GB)

Interface
TF Card Interface, Mini USB interface, earphone interface

Weight
195 grams (with battery)

Temperature
0~ 40C

Storage temperature
-20~ 55C

Supported formats
TXT (HTXT), DOC, HTML, PDF, PNG, JPG, MP3, WMA, WAV, etc.

Battery
Polymer lithium-ion battery 1500mAh, 3.7V

F21 Product page (Chinese)
F21 Product page (Google Translate)


Writer Nick Cave At NYC Barnes & Noble

September 18, 2009

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Screensnap — do not click to play

Writer Nick Cave appeared at the NYC Union Square Barnes & Noble bookstore this past Monday, September 14.

The video of that has been put up.

Cave talks about and reads from his latest novel, The Death of Bunny Munro.

In addition to being available in print, it’s also a groundbreaking digital book from Enhanced Editions at the iTunes App Store for the iPhone and iPod Touch. It costs US$24.99 [App Store link] (it’s 900MB of text, audio, video, and more!), but there’s a free sampler [App Store link] available too.

BunnyMunroCover


The Lost Symbol: The eBook Tipping Point?

September 17, 2009

LostSymbolCover

I don’t even know if that’s the proper cover for it. Someone in Comments informs me the pirate eBook version I screensnapped is of a non-U.S. edition. I didn’t look at the pirate edition beyond what I snapped — and no longer possess it (I really did delete it!).

There was much chatter on the Net yesterday about this book outselling the print edition in terms of sales from Amazon.

I initially discounted those as being wishful thinking.

Now I’m not so sure.

Because no one knows how many “Kindles” are really out there now.

I put “Kindles” in quotes deliberately because what people tend to forget is that an iPhone and iPhone Touch are now “Kindles” too, thanks to Amazon’s Kindle reading software.

There are fifty million of those devices out there. Thirty and twenty million, respectively.

Stanza Reader is on at least two million (probably more) of those devices. And that’s software that basically became known via the Internet echo chamber.

While just about everyone on the planet knows about the Kindle, so Amazon didn’t have to explain what a Kindle application would do or why someone would want to have it. With that kind of marketing blitz, I expect there have been millions and millions of downloads of it.

How many, only Amazon (and Apple) know.

It’s worth keeping this post from Shortcovers in mind while contemplating this possible development: Dan Brown is the New King of eBooks. Some excerpts:

In just one day, Dan Brown’s new book, The Lost Symbol, sold more eBook copies than the last one and a half months of Stephanie Meyer’s hit Twilight series.

And:

This will easily be the biggest eBook of the year, and perhaps the biggest eBook so far. Everyone who has been watching the eBook space (publishers, retailers, device manufacturers…) will no doubt be using Dan Brown as a proxy for what eBooks will do to physical book sales, and how to size the overall opportunity.

And:

Most purchases were made on the web. Mobile purchases by platform: 37% iPhone, 31% Palm Pre, 29% Blackberry, 3% Android. Web sales were driven by our brand new feature (Adobe/ePub) enabling a customer to buy an eBook with us and download it to their desktop, eReader or smartphone.

And:

Yesterday beat our biggest sales day by almost 2X, and the same day last week by 3X.

We won’t know what the eBook sales have been unless its publisher decides to bray about them. This is competitive intelligence they might wish to keep to themselves. It could, however, leak out.

We can’t yet say this is good for all eBooks. It could be an anomalous spike created by hype.

What we definitely can say is that Amazon’s grip on eBooks has gotten tighter and its negotiating position more powerful versus all print publishers. That alone is not a good thing.


How The Axis Of E Is Killing Publishing

September 16, 2009

Yesterday on Twitter someone stated that just fourteen minutes after the eBook went on sale, a pirate copy of The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown was available.

Today I speculated that if that was the case, it was most likely the ePub that had been cracked.

Yep. And this post is proof.

It took me less than five minutes to find it and have a copy:

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I opened it in FBReader in order not to clog up Adobe Digital Editions or Sony eBook Library:

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And that’s as far as I went. I have no interest in reading the book and definitely no interest in possessing an illegal copy for longer than it took to create these screensnaps for this post.

So it was off to the Recycle Bin for it:

TLS006

Wave bye-bye!

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And it’s gone from my hard drive.

There are deluded rubes out there claiming the Kindle eBook has outsold the print edition. Grow a brain!

I’d hardly be surprised, however, to learn that the pirated ePub edition has more circulation and readers than the printed edition.

And no, don’t bother to ask the where and hows of this. I won’t say.


Advice Too Good To Lose

September 15, 2009

Bob Lefsetz:

Don’t do endorsements.

Don’t make deals with sponsors.

Don’t worry about offending.

And you might have a career that lasts a decade or two.

Pursue your dream.

Don’t focus on the hit.

Break the rules.

Tell those in your way to fuck off.

Don’t be afraid of alienating potential customers.

And you might just grow a fan base dedicated enough to give you all its money, and evangelize to others, getting them to part with their dough too.

From his post, Jobs Hits The Stage.


Apple: Give The App Store A Wish List!

September 12, 2009

Today I was window shopping at the App Store. I found a few things that interested me but I didn’t want to buy them now.

A similar thing happens to me when I’m browsing the eBooks at the New York Public Library. There will be a title I want to borrow, but it’s unavailable at the moment. Thank God for a Wish List! The OverDrive system is so bad, I’m very grateful I can park my lust items there and quickly refer to their status later on.

But Apple’s App Store? A Wish List?

Apple itself says No!

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AppStoreNoWishList2

Why oh why, Apple?

And while I’m at it, I’d not only like a Wish List in the App Store, I’d like the option to share it with others. Either select friends or even strangers. Then when someone says, “I’d like to get you a gift. What would you like?” I can simply tell them to choose something on that list.

Hey, Apple, the big gift-giving season is coming up. Time to get this done.


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