eBook Readers 101 - Part II

Kindle at the Tiger’s Nest MonastaryThis continues the series on using an eBook reader academically.

Of course, as fun as a shiny new piece of technology is, we must make it work for us. “Geek to live, not live to geek” and all that.You have a few options when it comes to acquiring content for your device.

  1. Buy It
  2. Scan It
  3. Download it from a free source

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eBook Readers 101 - Part I

Over the past few weeks I’ve spent some time dealing with eBook readers. One thing I’ve found I can do, most the time, is kind of mindless technical work. I’ve installed Ubuntu on my Mac (in a Boot Camp partition) and used it for a few days (review: great, but still not ready for your prime-time computer user. Spending an entire day finding a patch someone wrote to get your sound card working is not good), I’ve wired up most the apartment so everything works with… well, everything. That sort of thing.

At any rate, combining money from Christmas and my birthday, I decided to get an eBook reader. So, I’m going to discuss them a bit in terms of using them for school (as that is my primary, but hardly the only use). I think this is the emerging way of handling texts, and there’s no reason to wait (for some of us!)

There are a number of different eBook readers that make use of eInk - this is the relatively new display technology that lacks back lighting and is as readable (and often more readable) than paper. I’m going to cover three, briefly.

The Sony Reader 505 - This is the cheapest of the bunch, the prettiest, and has a nice sized group of people “hacking” it to use various formats or convert them. I had one of these and took it back. It is a wonderful device, but for academic use it is unsuitable do its lack of a search function (and a search function is necessary as pagination is different on an ebook reader and you can’t flip super fast through the pages). However, for price and availability, and in a non-academic setting - I’d highly suggest this model. (~$300)

The iRex iLiad - This is the big daddy of eBook devices. It has touch capabilities (you can write, draw on the screen), has a linux core you can install software on, wifi built in, and probably most importantly - a big display - big enough that technical pdf’s can be easily read. This allows you people taking math and science courses to make use of an eBook reader in a meaningful way as OCR-ing the text for reflow isn’t an option. It is, however, much more expensive than the others as well. If I had the extra cash, this would be my device of choice.(~$700)

The Amazon Kindle - What I’m going with. It’s very similar to the Sony Reader except it has search, underline, and annotate functions. It also has a rudimentary web browser, and you can purchase books (and also visit free sites for books, like Project Gutenberg or Feedbooks) and download content immediately. A big deal for me, however, was the ability to get newspapers and magazines on the device. There are ways to do this on the other devices as well, but Amazon seems to do the best job as far as width and breath of quality content. The Atlantic Monthly, the New York Times, Slate and Salon? Oh my! (~$400)

The biggest problem, with all these devices, is finding them at the moment is a pain in the butt. All are available through eBay - some at very good prices, just slightly higher than retail, but few are available online. The Sony Reader can often be found at your local Borders, however. The Kindle has a 4-6 week waiting period, the iLiad is “god knows how long” and the Sony Reader is kind of “catch as catch can.” If you are interested in the Kindle, I’d certainly appreciate it if you ordered it through the link to your right.

In Part II of this, I’ll go into getting content for your device, including textbooks.

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Feedbooks - For Those of You Who Like eBooks

As I’ve been playing with my new eBook reader (the only advantage of one’s birthday being near Christmas is the ability to combine monetary gifts for large purchases!) I’ve found a number of new sites for eBooks.  One I like in particular is Feedbooks.

Feedbooks takes books in the public domain (both generated by them and users) and people who may wish to publish their own work, and makes the content easily (and freely) available in a variety of formats.  New content is being generated daily.  For instance, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Tender is the Night is available in ePub, MobiPocket/Kindle, PDF in A4 size (close to standard paper size in the states), Sony Reader, iLiad Reader, and the ability to custom design your own PDF size.

But, that’s not all!  Feedbooks also allows you to turn RSS feeds into these sorts of files as well, quickly and easily.  You can also compose your own “Newspaper” of your favorite feeds.  The only big drawback here is that partial feeds, as you might imagine, don’t work terribly well (another reason to dislike partial feeds).  You can find a link to Mindful Ink’s under the RSS icon in the corner of the site.

I’ve also compiled a list of excellent Feedbooks below:

FeedBooks: MindfulInk’s Collection

So, if you’re interested in this sort of thing - take a look.

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Dhammapada iPhone Webapp

In just one of the strange things you’ll be seeing here from time to time, I created a webapp of the classic Buddhist text - the Dhammapada. You can view it on browsers aside from an iPhone, but you probably won’t get full functionality.

I actually created it while trying to work out good way to deal with texts on my iPhone and this arose from my experiments (as the Dhammpada is always a good read and my dog eared little copy was getting a bit frayed).The iPhone still lacks a solid eBook reader in either webapp or local app version (some good starts, but no one is quite there yet) so I may do this with a few other texts I find.

iDhammapada

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