ok fuck bloomsbury then.
― ledge, Thursday, 31 January 2013 16:36 (thirteen years ago)
ledge, they are often in the same order of magnitude in the uk. think hydrogen sonata, say, is £9.49 digital and £20rrp physical but the physical is available for £12 or so (amazon)
― koogs, Thursday, 31 January 2013 16:38 (thirteen years ago)
Never found much difference except in the ease of thieving it. Over to you mr pubisher.
― b'hurt's tauntin' (darraghmac), Thursday, 31 January 2013 16:40 (thirteen years ago)
classic typo
― ledge, Thursday, 31 January 2013 16:42 (thirteen years ago)
player of games, is £6.29 paperback, £4.99 digital so it appears that the digital price does come down with the release of the paperback. which i find slightly illogical.
over in Kobo world, they appear to be selling bundles. there's an alastair reynolds bundle of all 7 of the revelation space universe books for, oh, it was £15 last time i looked, now £28. less of a bargain...
― koogs, Thursday, 31 January 2013 16:44 (thirteen years ago)
Fuckin android
― b'hurt's tauntin' (darraghmac), Thursday, 31 January 2013 16:59 (thirteen years ago)
there's an alastair reynolds bundle of all 7 of the revelation space universe books for, oh, it was £15 last time i looked, now £28. less of a bargain...
*now* you tell me
― ledge, Thursday, 31 January 2013 17:00 (thirteen years ago)
does a kindle handle kobo drmed epubs?
― koogs, Thursday, 31 January 2013 17:14 (thirteen years ago)
no, kindle only takes mobi and pdf. there are easy ways to convert epubs to mobis but i don't know if the drm would get in the way.
― congratulations (n/a), Thursday, 31 January 2013 17:16 (thirteen years ago)
Pretty sure mine takes epubs...
― b'hurt's tauntin' (darraghmac), Thursday, 31 January 2013 17:19 (thirteen years ago)
But thats likely wrong tbh i dont pay .much notice
― b'hurt's tauntin' (darraghmac), Thursday, 31 January 2013 17:20 (thirteen years ago)
"Download options: Adobe DRM EPUB"
that it's adobe gives me hope that it's more widely supported than kobo proprietary drm would be but...
i don't intend on ever paying for any ebook - my kobo is full of gutenberg classics and anything newer than that i want i'll buy as a physical copy.
― koogs, Thursday, 31 January 2013 17:21 (thirteen years ago)
I've got a sony reader but this is the default ereader thread so
― ledge, Thursday, 31 January 2013 17:30 (thirteen years ago)
There's a program called Calibre that will strip DRM and convert formats for any e-reader.
― Kiarostami bag (milo z), Thursday, 31 January 2013 18:03 (thirteen years ago)
Kindle fire owners- yes or no?
― ben foster five (darraghmac), Wednesday, 6 February 2013 12:04 (thirteen years ago)
Calibre is awesome, but pretty sure it doesn't strip DRM. In fact, I want to say the Calibre site even has an awesome anti-DRM screed, but says it's up to you to do the deed.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 6 February 2013 13:09 (thirteen years ago)
Ebooks can be converted from a number of formats into whatever format your ebook reader prefers. Many ebooks available for purchase will be protected by Digital Rights Management (DRM) technology. calibre will not convert these ebooks. It is easy to remove the DRM from many formats, but as this may be illegal, you will have to find tools to liberate your books yourself and then use calibre to convert them.
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 6 February 2013 13:12 (thirteen years ago)
There's an easy to find plug in for Calibre that strips drm. Works like a charm.
― EZ Snappin, Wednesday, 6 February 2013 13:14 (thirteen years ago)
Yeah, I have definitely used it to strip DRM.
― mh, Wednesday, 6 February 2013 15:24 (thirteen years ago)
http://gen.lib.rus.ec/
Have only recently discovered this place. Not earning atm, so this site is manna from heaven. Finally found a reasonable English copy of The Dice Man. I'm yet to find a more comprehensive database on the net. I only wish I'd known about this site during my degree, could've saved me pots of money.
― Windsor Davies, Wednesday, 6 February 2013 19:18 (thirteen years ago)
I'm reluct to click while at my workplace, but is this something along the lines of library.nu? (I hope)?
― there were chinchillas, these weird little rat animals, in cages (Jon Lewis), Wednesday, 6 February 2013 19:31 (thirteen years ago)
Never used library.nu so I can't comment there really. But this is a Russian site (in English, primarily) where you download the books direct from the site. It's not infallible but it's found most of the things I've thrown at it, including a number of fairly obscure history books.
― Windsor Davies, Wednesday, 6 February 2013 19:45 (thirteen years ago)
Not had any nasty warnings about malware or anything and my early virus scans haven't shown anything either, as yet. Seems alreet.
― Windsor Davies, Wednesday, 6 February 2013 19:46 (thirteen years ago)
So apparently you can't buy someone an Amazon Kindle ebook as a gift in the UK, even though you can in the US. Is this right? Too bad if so.
Generally I would still rather give a paper book than an ebook as a gift as I'd feel a bit cheap about giving "virtual" presents, but I was going to buy a book which isn't available in large print for my Gran, whose eyesight isn't what it was but who apparently loves the Kindle she got for Christmas.
Just tut-tutting into the void really.
― susuwatari teenage riot (a passing spacecadet), Sunday, 3 March 2013 18:18 (thirteen years ago)
i think i'm gonna get one. i made fun of them for a long time but i changed my mind. i was thinking about ipad mini but i think i'd be too distracted by the internet like i am by iphone.
― veryupsetmom (harbl), Sunday, 3 March 2013 20:30 (thirteen years ago)
I use Amazon vouchers for the exact amount of the book, and put in the notes what it's for.
They could go out and buy anything with it, but people just buy the book.
unless they're dicks, then you shouldn't be buying them presents anyway.....
― my opinionation (Hamildan), Sunday, 3 March 2013 21:39 (thirteen years ago)
Thanks Hamildan. I probably will do that, but letting them see the price and making them go and click "buy" etc somehow seems less present-y, and also my Gran is pretty tech-savvy for someone in her late 80s but I'm still worried she'll be confused. "The button says 'buy', but I thought you'd already bought it for me, so I don't want that, do I?" etc.
really just shrugging my shoulders and going "Americans have this, why can't we?" but there is probably some tedious reason involving publishers' legal smallprint or something
― susuwatari teenage riot (a passing spacecadet), Sunday, 3 March 2013 22:00 (thirteen years ago)
Fyi we have to go through .com for ireland too, dollars and US selection and everything.
― poll that whitey music pfunkboy (darraghmac), Sunday, 3 March 2013 22:56 (thirteen years ago)
so do we, although at least amazon shows me au$ (and geoblocks half its stuff because morons)
― ≪江南Style≫ (Autumn Almanac), Sunday, 3 March 2013 23:49 (thirteen years ago)
it's funny b/c Amazon has employees in DUB and SYD but doesn't sell things there, apart from Web Services.
― my god i only have 2 useless beyblade (silby), Monday, 4 March 2013 02:14 (thirteen years ago)
'DUB and SYD' sounds like a triphop duo
― ≪江南Style≫ (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 4 March 2013 02:57 (thirteen years ago)
Best amazon employee quote I read today was that as long as people think they're a bookstore, they're winning on everything else
same people think things like VMware are screwed in the presence of cloud hosting
― ☠ ☃ ☠ (mh), Monday, 4 March 2013 04:05 (thirteen years ago)
Anyone published for Kindle? There are some slightly out-of-the-way public domain things that I wanted to put on my kindle-for-ipad thing, & I thought about grabbing texts from archive.org & cleaning them up. & then I thought that if I'm doing that, maybe I should publish them. Amazon have their annotated, illustrated or translated policy for public domain stuff, so maybe it would end up being too much of a pita. But then fuck it, why not produce dirt cheap annotated editions of stuff as a hobby?
― woof, Monday, 15 April 2013 10:09 (thirteen years ago)
I can't speak to the public domain aspect, but I helped my mom Kindle-publish a romance novella she wrote, and the process of formatting and uploading is dead easy. It took about 48 hours from submission to it being live on the site.
― a sentimental knife (reddening), Tuesday, 16 April 2013 19:38 (thirteen years ago)
yr mom wrote 50 Shades?
― Dr. Adorbius (mh), Tuesday, 16 April 2013 19:53 (thirteen years ago)
i wish! then she could buy me health insurance with all that sweet buttplug money.
― a sentimental knife (reddening), Tuesday, 16 April 2013 19:59 (thirteen years ago)
the process of formatting and uploading is dead easy
I've got a book that I'd like to toss up onto Kindle someday, if it isn't too hard. Is the formatting automated, or is there a spec sheet that you follow while hand-editing in the correct formatting codes?
― Aimless, Tuesday, 16 April 2013 20:02 (thirteen years ago)
I'm sure reddening can answer properly, but it looks pretty easy to me - you just have to get it to something resembling html (via Word export or whatever - I'm planning to use markdown + a script), then run that through a bit of Amazon software that'll turn it into a kindle file (.mobi).
― woof, Tuesday, 16 April 2013 20:07 (thirteen years ago)
by 'resembling html' I mean a limited subset of html
like it's basic 'h1, h2, p, b, i' markup.
― woof, Tuesday, 16 April 2013 20:08 (thirteen years ago)
I guess I could play around with formatting a sample chapter before diving in to the whole book. Then view it on Kindle for PC, tweaking anything that didn't come across ok.
― Aimless, Tuesday, 16 April 2013 20:11 (thirteen years ago)
Yeah, if you have a normally formatted Word document, they'll ask you to save it as a particular file type, and it'll preserve your italics/bolding/hard page breaks. I didn't create a Table of Contents, so I can't speak to the difficulty of that, but it looked no more difficult than doing basic HTML.
― a sentimental knife (reddening), Tuesday, 16 April 2013 20:20 (thirteen years ago)
they also have a downloadable viewer so you can see what your book will look like on various types of Kindles/screen sizes. I ended up using that on my final editing pass to make sure it all came out okay
― a sentimental knife (reddening), Tuesday, 16 April 2013 20:23 (thirteen years ago)
there's also a previewer on the tools page, which could help with the test-and-tweak process.
(xp!)
― woof, Tuesday, 16 April 2013 20:25 (thirteen years ago)
(not the kindle but i've been fiddling with epubs lately and those are pretty much just zipped up html files, complete with css support and a few files containing metadata for the chapters and toc. gutenberg seems to use a plain as day .txt file as the master source, runs a script over it to get the html and then epubs that html)
― koogs, Tuesday, 16 April 2013 20:38 (thirteen years ago)
cool info
btw my last post re ordering through US now appears defunct as i bought a kindle from amazon.co.uk this week without troubles. went for the basic model, i've seen the paperwhite and the evenness of the light was not great imo, aside from that there's nothing made me feel like paying extra.
― the gowls are not what they seem (darraghmac), Tuesday, 16 April 2013 21:36 (thirteen years ago)
UK folks: nooks are £29 at the mo. That seems insanely cheap..
― sktsh, Tuesday, 30 April 2013 21:11 (thirteen years ago)
Yeah, I saw that ... are they any good?
― djh, Tuesday, 30 April 2013 22:05 (thirteen years ago)
They got decent reviews in the US. Not sure whether the content is up to scratch given lack of B&N here, but I think I'm going to take the plunge. Will report back!
― sktsh, Tuesday, 30 April 2013 22:40 (thirteen years ago)
godspeed
― the norman wisdom of gaffers (darraghmac), Tuesday, 30 April 2013 22:41 (thirteen years ago)