Thu June 18 2015
ALL-New Paperwhite announced: 300dpi E-Ink screen |
04:47 AM by gebederry in E-Book General | News enhanced PPI and RAM Amazon US link
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[ 155 replies ] |
"All-New" Kindle Paperwhite with 300ppi display - June 30th |
04:46 AM by j777p in E-Book Readers | Amazon Kindle Shipping June 30th $119
The new Kindle Paperwhite adds our highest resolution Paperwhite display, delivering the same 300 pixels per inch that readers love about the top-of-the-line Kindle Voyage. With unsurpassed resolution and 2x the pixels as the previous generation Kindle Paperwhite, the display delivers laser-quality text, making it easy to read comfortably at any font size, including at smaller fonts so you can fit more words on each page. Even with the new higher resolution display, Kindle Paperwhite delivers battery life that is measured in weeks rather than hours. New Bookerly Font and Typography Features—Read Faster With Less Eyestrain Kindle Paperwhite now offers Bookerly, an exclusive font designed from the ground up for reading on digital screens. Warm and contemporary, Bookerly is inspired by the artistry of the best fonts in modern print books, but is hand-crafted for great readability at any size. It introduces a lighter, more graceful look and outperforms other digital reading fonts to help customers read faster with less eyestrain. See Bookerly: www.amazon.com/bookerly. The new Kindle Paperwhite also offers an all-new typesetting engine that lays out words just as the author intended: Hyphenation and improved spacing—Kindle Paperwhite adds hyphenation to break words at the right place, creates paragraphs with consistent lines, and adjusts the space between words. This results in more natural word spacing and more words on each page, which allows for faster reading with less eyestrain. See an example: www.amazon.com/hyphenation. Improved character placement—New kerning and ligatures automatically adjust character spacing to make it easier and faster to recognize words at any font size. Similar to a typesetter formatting a print book, Kindle Paperwhite will look at neighboring pairs of letters in context and adjust the character spacing to suit the word, removing distracting whitespace between letters and making the shape of the word more beautiful to help with word recognition speed. For example, in the word “quietly”, the tail of the “y” loops under the “l” to make the letters of the word fit better together. In the word “first”, the “f” and “i” are drawn together to make a ligature. See an example: www.amazon.com/characterspacing. Beautiful page layout—Print books often use drop caps to add emphasis and beauty to the first page of a chapter. In eBooks, this is challenging to replicate given the ability to adjust font size and line spacing. The new typesetting engine presents drop caps, text, and images on Kindle just as the author intended, and dynamically adjusts the layout as the reader changes the text size. See an example: www.amazon.com/dropcaps. Large fonts, without compromises—One of the benefits of reading on Kindle is that you can customize the font size based on personal preference—over half of Kindle customers take advantage of this feature and use a font size larger than the default. As you increase the size of a font, fewer words appear on each page, often creating distractions like large white space or broken sentences. Now, Kindle Paperwhite automatically adapts when a reader chooses the largest font sizes, customizing the margins, columns, indents, nested lists, borders, and drop caps to keep the page easy to read. See an example: www.amazon.com/largefonts." The new Kindle Paperwhite is $119. It is available for pre-order around the world and will start shipping June 30. Order now at www.amazon.com/paperwhite. |
[ 231 replies ] |
Wed June 17 2015
Canadian Public Libraries for Fair Ebook Pricing Launches Website |
05:20 AM by trainboy in E-Book General | News via infoDOCKET. New coalition of organizations launches web page and tool. "The page features examples of the “price gap” between consumer and library prices, illustrated by a selection of popular titles, and includes social media sharing with hashtag #FairEbookPrices, as well as email collection for those interested in updates on the issue"
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[ 33 replies ] |
Tue June 16 2015
Amazon listens to authors; changes KU pay to per-page model |
05:58 AM by fjtorres in E-Book General | News https://kdp.amazon.com/help?topicId=A156OS90J7RDN
No real impact to readers except now it no longer favors shorts and serials over novels quite as much. They are also introducing a new metric:
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[ 59 replies ] |
Amazon Faces EU Antitrust Probe Into E-Books Contracts |
05:58 AM by Dopedangel in E-Book General | News http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articl...ooks-contracts Now Amazon seems to be under the fire of EU. |
[ 32 replies ] |
US Copyright Office report on Orphan Works & Mass Digitization |
05:58 AM by AnemicOak in E-Book General | News Thought this might be of interest to some folks. The US Copyright Office has just published a 234 page report on Orphan Works & Mass Digitization. PDF link |
[ 10 replies ] |
Mon June 08 2015
PW: Trade book sales down across the board |
09:28 AM by fjtorres in E-Book General | News From Publisher's weekly:
AAP numbers are normally year to year dollars, not unit sales. It lets them report a gain *somewhere*. Gory details at the source. |
[ 15 replies ] |
Sat May 30 2015
MobileRead Week in Review: 05/23 - 05/30 |
06:00 AM by Alexander Turcic in Miscellaneous | Week in Review Been away? Fear not! Here is your chance to check out what appeared on our frontpage this week: E-Book General - News E-Book General - Reading Recommendations |