02-20-2010, 06:45 PM | #46 | |
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EVERY currently shipping OS (Mac, Linux or Win) comes with a web browser, whether it's IE, Firefox, Chrome, Opera, or Safari. They can read HTML ebooks as a single file right out of the box. MOST OSes ship with a Zip utility built in, so most can read multiple-file ebooks or ones with embedded images right out of the box. How many PCs (Win, Linux or Mac) will ship with a dedicated ebook reader program? A handful. How many PCs ship with dedicated ebook reading software that can handle DRMd Epub? ZERO. Every PC shipped with an OS in the past 15 years has shipped with a browser pre-installed and most have come with zip pre-installed. Most DRM'd ebook readers can't run on anything older than an XP machine, but there are still millions of them in use. But all of these older PCs--which are more likely to be owned by people of limited income or which are probably backup machines for kids, etc.--CAN read HTML ebooks...as can previously mentioned XBoxes, Wiis, Playstation 3, Win CE devices, the ITablet/IPhone/IPodTouch and the Kindle (which both have built in web browsers), as can smart phones, Blackberries and...well, it'd be quicker to list the devices that can't read HTML. I am a Linux user. To the best of my knowledge (which is admitted limited ) there is no software that allows me to read DRMd ebooks without WINE. Granted, I know that Linux is a tiny percentage of the market and publishers need not accommodate everyone, but I think it backs up my point, especially as Linux derivates will become more and more common (which it will as cheap netbooks and smartbooks proliferate). We are a couple of years away from $100 netbooks (actually, they're already here, but a year, maybe two from mainstream $100 netbooks). At most 3-4 years from $50 netbooks you buy at RiteAid right next to the cheap digital cameras. Almost all of them will run Chrome, Android, Linux or some other Linux variant...none of which are supported by a DRMd ebook reader and so none of which will be accessible to the B&N, Amazon or SONY stores. I know I'm beating a dead horse, but I believe this is a very significant issue affecting accessibility for these ebooks and their widespread acceptance...and issues that will play a huge issue in the future of ebook publishing. |
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02-20-2010, 07:12 PM | #47 | |
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Bill, again, please separate the format from the DRM. DRM sucks. We all know that. But none of that will affect the viability of the ePub format generally.
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PDF only has a bad reputation in the ebook crowd because most PDFs currently in existence were made for A4 or letter sized paper, which doesn't fit on their ebook reader. Of course, a file not made with ereading in mind isn't going to good for ereading. But that's not a problem with the format. PDFs actually made to be ebooks, formatted for device screens, are awesome. No, they're not as portable, which is why I hope in the future ePub renderers get better typography. |
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02-20-2010, 08:00 PM | #48 | |
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If you're into typography buy them printed books. Last edited by K-Thom; 02-20-2010 at 08:03 PM. |
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02-20-2010, 08:36 PM | #49 | |
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Derek |
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02-20-2010, 08:41 PM | #50 | |
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Compare this (mobi on a Kindle): To this (ePub in ADE): To this (PDF): If you're telling me that you prefer one of the former two, and think it is more "readable", I can only think you're being disingenuous. And the source used to create that PDF could be used to produce multiple PDFs of various sizes formatted for various devices. In fact, I made that PDF, and made six different versions, for different sized paper/devices. What I want is an ePub rendered that can make shot #2 look like shot #3 on the fly, which is certainly possible. |
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02-20-2010, 08:41 PM | #51 |
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It's XHTML. There's no difference between what you can do with any web page and ePub. Blame publishers lazyness, not "ePub". (Or blame how hard it is to do proper layouts in XHTML, which is entirely down to the W3C...)
Frabjous, looks like you need to embed the appropriate font. Or use MathML, which some ePub readers already support, and looks to be standardised fairly soon. Last edited by DawnFalcon; 02-20-2010 at 08:45 PM. |
02-20-2010, 09:16 PM | #52 |
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Agreed. I avoid pdfs like the plague.
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02-20-2010, 11:32 PM | #53 | ||||
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I just get tired of hearing people who don't know what they're talking about bash PDF, when it's unquestionably true that right now PDF offers things ePub doesn't. I hope in the future that changes. But I should say that just embedding fonts won't do the trick, since you still won't get the kinds of features I was talking about. And comparing the possibilities to websites is hardly relevant. Most websites have worse typography than ADE. (Indeed I worry it's lowering people's standards.) But which ePub renderers already support MathML, out of curiosity? I don't know of any offhand. Given the increased portability of ePub, I can see why you'd want to acquire an ePub originally, but that's no reason to avoid PDF. You do realize that you can make a PDF with any font, any sized font, any justification, anything else? Indeed, I think it would be great if booksellers sold ePubs, and that the software on your home computer would take that ePub and convert it to a nice PDF using your customized settings before loading it onto your reader. In fact, only DRM prevents that now, in light of, e.g. jellby's wonderful epub2pdf script. Last edited by frabjous; 02-20-2010 at 11:51 PM. |
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02-21-2010, 12:32 AM | #54 |
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I was making the point that you're basically looking a web page. You can do all sorts of pretty things which are going to help some books lay things out properly. Of course, that does require you move away from print layouts.
And Bookworm supports MathML, I believe. Along with things like flash embedding for videos and so on. Consider this, actually, for future potential: <canvas> tags in eBooks. It'd be possible to, for instance, embed math problems in the book text (And show text based on the current state of the problem - explaining common errors, for example, as well as say "click here for hint" areas, etc. etc.). |
02-21-2010, 01:59 AM | #55 |
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02-21-2010, 02:15 AM | #56 |
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Wow, that's just a pretty darn silly thing to say. You're obviously unaware of what typography is for. It's not to create pretty-looking art. You must be thinking about hand-drawn parchment pages from a monastery with gold-painted drawings in the margins. Good typography is what makes text readable, silly. Good typography is completely unnoticeable - that's the whole point to it. If it weren't important at all, then why aren't you reading your books on your reader in a monospaced typewriter font? You may not be aware of the fact, but you are reading text that has been typeset even when you're just reading this post: you're just not reading text that has been typeset well. But even done as poorly as a web browser renders it, it's still better than reading monospaced 12 pt. Courier in ALL CAPS, right? And if you're going to read a book, which is obviously something in which text is the whole point, you might as well do the typesetting as well as possible, which is not something most of today's portable standards handle with panache. Using PDF-generated output from a well-designed typesetting engine is the only way currently to get typeset text that approaches professional quality. You're confusing reading a PDF that was generated for a 8.5x11 page on your tiny ereader (and of course that's not going to look good) with a PDF that was generated for your particular screen size from InDesign or TeX: and there the difference between even a well-crafted ePub and the PDF is going to be stark and clear. It's like going from an old TV to HD on a 52" flat panel in one step. Obviously PDF doesn't work for portability, and hopefully the HTML rendering engines in readers will eventually catch up to what InDesign and TeX can produce in a PDF. Until then, however, you won't catch me putting some crappy ePub on my reader: I'd rather spend a couple hours pouring the text into a InDesign template and outputting a very nice book, thank you very much. If you're happy reading your ePub or Mobi crap, good on ya.
Last edited by cmdahler; 02-21-2010 at 02:18 AM. |
02-21-2010, 03:38 AM | #57 |
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02-21-2010, 03:41 AM | #58 |
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For what it is worth I also think that ePub is the format for the future. But (at least on my ECO Reader) there are still some things that I'd like to do with ePub books but can't and yet can do with mobipocket books - change font and change between justified and right aligned text for example.
Perhaps other ePub readers can do them, but I'd still very much like to see these capabilities on my ECO Reader for ePub books. Regards, Alex |
02-21-2010, 04:17 AM | #59 | |
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02-21-2010, 04:41 AM | #60 | |
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Two instances recently spring to mind:
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