Tue September 10 2013
EPUB3Reader open-source Android App released |
08:34 AM by AlPe in E-Book Software | Reading and Management EPUB3Reader is a proof-of-concept Android App optimized for reading complex EPUB 2/3 ebooks, e.g. books with many internal/external links and/or with parallel texts. The project has been developed by three students, under my supervision, at the Department of Information Engineering, University of Padova, Padova (Padua), Italy. You can get the APK, the code (MIT license) and some EPUB ebooks featuring parallel texts (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 license) from the GitHub public repo: https://github.com/pettarin/epub3reader Screenshots are here: https://github.com/pettarin/epub3rea...SCREENSHOTS.md The app is not production-grade yet, but I think it shows some interesting UI tricks novel or not widely adopted in EPUB reading systems. Please see the README for a discussion. Comments are welcome. |
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Sun September 08 2013
Sony PRS-T3 video review for the undecided |
10:23 AM by Alexander Turcic in E-Book General | News When Sony revealed the PRS-T3 to the world last Wednesday, it brought with it the promise of a smart and satisfying reading experience. With all the new devices announced to bring love, joy and peace to the world of e-reading, we reckon it'd be difficult to make the right purchase decision. Thanks to the guys of allesebook.de, below is a nicely made video review that, although it's in German, should give you a pretty good idea whether the PRS-T3 is the right one for you.
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[ 66 replies ] |
Calibre Companion V3.1.1 released |
05:15 AM by chaley in E-Book Software | Calibre Companion CC V3.1.1 has been released and should start appearing as an update soon. This release:
Please comment or report problems with this release on this thread or by making a new thread. |
[ 29 replies ] |
DIY Kindle scanner and DRM cracker |
03:33 AM by doctorow in E-Book General | General Discussions Did you ever wonder how to use Lego Mindstorm to make your Kindle collection DRM-free? Well, according to the maker, "this is an art project reflecting the relation of book scanning, copyright, and digital rights management. This is not intended to be understood as an instruction or invitation, but rather as a provocative thought experiment." From AllThingsD:
Here is the video: |
[ 15 replies ] |
The college textbook ripoff charted by Bloomberg |
03:25 AM by doctorow in E-Book General | News This is not about the rising cost of college tuition. This is about the rising cost of college textbooks. And it's real bad! Bloomberg has it as its Chart of the Day:
Did textbooks just get so much better, or is it a problem that professors, who are in charge of determining what their students have to buy, usually don't have any control over the cost of the textbooks? [image: wohnai via Flickr] |
[ 37 replies ] |
Sat September 07 2013
Anti-piracy watermark in e-books gets disassembled, it's a tiny barcode! |
06:44 PM by Alexander Turcic in E-Book General | News Last month we learned how the anti-piracy outfit BREIN is able to track down suspected e-book pirates by matching digital watermarks inside e-books with the transaction records they receive from e-book sellers (not without causing a political controversy). If you've caught yourself wondering how such a digital watermark looks like, a computer science student at the University of Twente was able to get his hands on a watermarked EPUB file and dissected it into pieces. The result is astonishingly simple: embedded on every page in the book is a minuscule image that turns out to be an ordinary barcode. This barcode contains the transaction code which uniquely identifies the e-book purchase.
So is that really all? The author of the post doesn't exclude the possibility of other "invisible" watermarks, such as random variations in text or punctuation. How to know for sure? By comparing two separate purchases of the same book. |
[ 30 replies ] |
The morality of circumventing geographical restrictions only to buy cheaper ebooks |
02:44 PM by K. Molen in E-Book General | General Discussions With the launch of Amazon India I find myself wondering about the morality of circumventing geographical restrictions only to save money. With ebooks there's no shipping costs involved, so it'd be an easy thing to do and I wouldn't notice the difference in the end product. I'm personally perfectly fine with circumventing geographical restrictions to get access to an ebook that's not for sale in my location, but I'm not sure how I feel about doing it to get a better price. On the one hand, it's still buying the book from a legal seller and the only thing that's making it a gray area is where I'm physically located. On the other hand, I'm denying authors some of their profits. To illustrate what I'm talking about, the Kindle ebook for Margaret Atwood's latest, Maddaddam, is $17.49 on Amazon.com and $9.98 on Amazon.in, so if I were to buy this via Amazon India I'd effectively deny Atwood approximately 50% of her royalties on that sale. I say approximately 50% because the list price show an even bigger difference, and I think authors probably earn their royalties on that price. In addition to the authors, I'm obviously also denying publishers some profit and possibly Amazon as well, although I'm less sure about the latter. So yeah... thoughts? [image: Pen Waggener via Flickr] |
[ 208 replies - poll! ] |
Sony PRS-T1 (refurbished) with cover now CDN$60 (deal, Canada) |
09:53 AM by BadBilly in E-Book General | Deals and Resources (No... Sony Canada is now selling a bundle of refurbished T1 (with one year warranty) and unlit cover for $59.99. I got this bundle at Christmas for $79.99 and have had no trouble with the Reader. This reader features MP3 playback and a bunch more bilingual dictionaries than the T2 and T3. No Facebook or Evernote integration, though. Edit: Free shipping in Canada too! |
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