Showing posts with label google books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google books. Show all posts

Thursday, May 6, 2010

In Thinking About Google Books, the Kindle, and the iPad, How About a Little Reality?

Just as many of us are coming to grips with the reality that Apple and Amazon have more to gain as partners than as adversaries when it comes both to hardware and content, along comes Google this week with yet another Google Books launch date and all kinds of attention paid in the media to whether Google Books will be a Kindle Killer, an iBooks Killer, or both.


I'll devote another post to some of the fun we can already have downloading content to iPads and other devices from Google Books, but for not it is important to note that there is a colossal amount of misinformation being passed around about all of this, and how it all relates to the ebook offerings of Apple, Amazon, and other entities. The basic mythical narrative that is being spread about the Google initiative is that its ebooks will be "open" in all kinds of ways in which Kindle and iBooks offerings are "closed." It's simply not true. Here are the two main points to remember.
  • The Kindle, the free Kindle apps for other devices, and the iPad are all, each and every one, capable of reading millions of books that are available from the Internet Archive, Google Books, Project Gutenberg, Feedbooks, Manybooks, Baen Books, and many other ebook sources, without any purchase necessary from the Kindle or iBooks stores.
  • Any of the 512,000 books that can currently can be purchased and downloaded from the Kindle Store can be read with or without a Kindle. Repeat: you don't need a Kindle to buy them and you don't need a Kindle to read them. What you do need, depending on what kind of hardware you intend to use, is a free download of one of the Kindle apps for the PC, the Mac, the iPad, the Phone, the iPod Touch, or the BlackBerry. If you do not own any of these, you are not reading this post anyway, right? 
The Kindle platform has dominated the ebook content market up to now, and may continue to dominate. The iPad is a beautiful device that will revolutionize the ways in which people use technology and the internet. The iBooks reading environment is also pretty cool, but as long as the actual iBooks Store has only 12% to 20% as many titles as the Kindle Store, and as long as Apple lags behind in the kind of search/browse/sort features to which Amazon and Kindle customers have become accustomed, it is likely that the majority of ebooks bought and downloaded to iPads will come from the Kindle Store. In the digital age, after all, most of us have become pretty good at shopping around.

The Google Books Store, by all accounts, may have a serious edge when it comes to catalog offerings, although it remains to be seen how contemporary and commercial the Google catalog will be right from the start. But assuming that Google can make beneficial deals with rightsholders so that it offers the kind of frontlist, midlist, backlist, and indie offerings of distinction that serious readers want to read, it will have two main hurdles to overcome:
  • Ironically, the current search/sort/browse infrastructure of Google Books comes up way short compared to the Kindle Store.
  • There's nothing at present to suggest that the device-agnostic Google Books reading environment will be nearly as neat a reading environment as we're used to with the Kindle and the iPad, but we'll see.
  • As powerful as Google is in the internet world, it will still be coming late to the party that -- as of this summer -- will be dominated by the Kindle and iPad platforms, and to a large extent its success will be driven by its ability to fit in nicely with the core groups of series readers who are already reading on those platforms, so it will need to step carefully and be more collaborative than adversarial.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

iPad Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Tuesday, April 13, 2010 - Lois Stiles Edgerly's "Give Her This Day: A Daybook of Women's Words," Google Books, and a Match Made in Reading Heaven

By Stephen Windwalker, Editor of iPad Nation Daily

Do you love to read?

Do you love your iPad? (Or iPhone or iPod Touch? I'll keep saying "iPad" most of the time in these posts just to keep it simple, but most of the time you can just insert the name of your iDevice as you continue reading here.)

I do, on both counts.

Well, there's great news for us. Apple, Amazon, and a growing number of other ebook venues have our backs. The result for us could be a match made in Reading Heaven. And although there's a lot to be said for the Kindle and iBooks Apps, they are just the tips of the two-tipped iceberg when it comes to our reading choices.

Among the many terrific features of the iPad as an ebook reader is the fact that it allows you to grab free or paid content from numerous sources on the web and read it right on your iPad screen without any extra steps for file conversion, USB cable connections, etc. For some authors and publishers the free content may lead to paid transactions involving their other offerings; in other cases the texts are simply offered freely or are in the public domain.


Over the next few days we'll focus briefly on -- and provide the steps you need to take advantage of -- several approaches to getting great free reading content on your iPad. Many of these will also work well on your iPhone or iPod Touch.

The bottom line for us is that the iPad can be the gateway to millions of free books and other free reading content. (By the way, I hope you'll allow iPad Nation Daily to be your guide with tips, suggestions, and alerts for free and bargain content, and perhaps even consider a subscription if you also happen to own a Kindle. Subscriptions in the Kindle Store begin with a free 14-day trial, and if you continue after 14 days I'm pretty confident we can save you far more than the monthly subscription cost.)

So let's get started today with Google Books, which according to Google allows you access to over 10 million books and magazines from commercially available releases to books scanned from the world's libraries.

Just to keep it simple, we'll focus on Lois Stiles Edgerly's Give Her This Day: A Daybook of Women's Words, newly re-issued in Google Books' free digital edition or available on Amazon.com, at prices that range all the way from a penny to $29.85, in its original 1990 Tilbury House Publishing hardcover and paperback editions. (In case you had any doubts about the value of literary pedigree, I happen to know of Edgerly's work because her young son Len is the remarkable creative force behind The Reading Edge Podcast: Conversations About the eBook Revolution, other podcasts, blogs, and publications poetic and personal, and along with co-founder Ken Clark, the eBooks for Troops initiative.)


You can start reading Give Her This Day: A Daybook of Women's Words on your iPad within seconds. Just click on this link and then, when the title's Google Books page comes up with a display similar to that shown in the screenshot below, click on the blue "Read this book" button.

One of the great things about making Give Her This Day your first Google Books read on your iPad is that, by virtue of the very definition of a "daybook," there will be no need for you to read the entire book before you continue your explanations. Once you've mastered the remarkably simple two-step route to free reading Nirvana prescribed above, just use the pulldown Table of Contents to find and read today's one-page "Just One Cat" entry by Helen Maria Winslow, and then you can wander off to further literary or research explorations.

My favorite angle of exploratory approach involves the Advanced Book Search that's visible at the upper-right corner of the above screenshot. Experiment and organize your searches in any way you please to focus on millions of books or thousands of magazines, and be aware -- although there are bound to be some glitches along the way -- that you can limit your search to free content by selecting the "Full View Only" option.

Happy iReading! And here, just so you don't lose touch with them, are today's free promotional book listings from the Kindle Store:




Bite Me. There, I've said it.

And the reason I've said it is that it is the title of the latest free offering in the Kindle Store, a teen novel whose protagonist Val Shapiro "is just your ordinary, part-demon, teenaged vampire hunter with a Texas drawl." And it should be no surprise that the author, whose parents may or may not have named her Parker Blue, has a sequel, Try Me, for sale for $9.99 in the Kindle Store.

Aside to parents who wonder if the you should somehow content-block a book entitled Bite Me from your teens: sorry, but get over it. As the very proud dad of two daughters who have turned out wonderfully, I learned a long time ago that (1) you'll lose the war if you try to win a lot of battles by trying to draw pre-emptive lines too restrictively in the sand; and (2) if you think you are protecting your 14-year old from anything real by keeping her nose out of books like Bite Me, chances are good that you have a lot to learn about what's really going on in her life. 


If you also own a Kindle, the best way to find out about these free listings right away, when they occur, is to subscribe to the Kindle edition of iPad Nation Daily, which pushes iPad Nation Daily Free Book Alerts directly to your Kindle Home screen 24/7. And in the case of many free listings that disappear within a matter of hours or days, "right away" is often just in time. 

No Kindle Required: Whether you are a long-time Kindle owner or you've just acquired an iPad and are filling it with ebooks for the first time or you are reading Kindle books on a PC, Mac, BlackBerry, iPhone or iPad Touch, you can get any and all of these titles absolutely free on your Kindle-compatible device of choice! Click here to download a free Kindle App for your device.

Bite Me by Parker Blue
4.0 out of 5 stars (4)
4.2 out of 5 stars (17)
4.5 out of 5 stars (20)
90 Minutes in Heaven: A True Story of Death & Life
3.8 out of 5 stars (596)
 
A Promise to Remember
4.9 out of 5 stars (21)