Showing posts with label lost symbol. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lost symbol. Show all posts

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Random House Kindle books added for international download - Update


Amazon announced today that Kindle owners around the world can finally download English-Language books by Random House that were previously available only to U.S. customers.  Okay, the international community got their Christmas gift, where's ours? LOL! Just kidding.

  They explain:
' Until now, Random House English-language books, such as Dan Brown's "The Lost Symbol," were only available to Kindle customers living in the United States. Today, Amazon announced that it is adding to its international Kindle Stores books published by all of Random House's English-language publishing divisions.

These titles will be available in the Kindle Store for download in any area where Random House has the digital rights, such as the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia.

... Other popular English-language titles that are now available to download in any area where those digital rights are available include Danielle Steel's "A Good Woman" and Markus Zusak's "The Book Thief."

UPDATE - As of the morning of Dec 24, the programmers don't seem to have enabled the international buying feature yet on the Random House books, as reported by a UK and a Canadian person.  Give it a couple of days, or call Customer Service at 866-321-8851 but it's a holiday for many.  They were replying to people today on the Stephen King book so are on duty but I'm leaving the house.  Good luck, all.  4:04pm on 12/24. Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
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Tuesday, September 22, 2009

The Kindle 2 and DX Go to School


A KINDLE 2 FOR HIGH SCHOOL CLASSES
  Advanced Placement English students at Ninety Six High School in Greenwood, South Carolina, are going book free in favor of using Kindle 2's.
  Index Journal's Felicia Kitzmiller reports on the district's recent purchase of 25 Amazon Kindle 2's for classroom use.
"I have one personally, and I love it,” assistant superintendent for instruction Rhonda McDowell said. "We want to be on the cutting edge of technology.

McDowell said that in the long run the Kindles might save the district money on purchasing books.  She feels that e-textbooks are "considerably less costly than the books themselves, and for every one text they purchase, they receive six electronic copies."

  This is generally true for up to 6 people sharing one Kindle account via one accountholder, including families, housemates, or friends.

  "And once a text has been added to a Kindle it is there until it is deleted, so classes reading the same books can use them over and over again."

KINDLE DX FOR UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN
University of Wisconsin students begin their own Kindle pilot program.
' Instead of having students purchase books, UW lent the Kindles with all eight required texts loaded and ready to read.  [History professor Jeremi] Suri's class will be highlighted by Leo Tolstoy's "War and Peace," infamous for its hefty 1,200 pages.

"We're learning in this, too.  Can you even read 1,200 pages on a Kindle?" Suri said. '
The $10,000 pilot program is funded by their library, involves 20 students, and although Amazon partnered with several other schools, the University wanted to invest in the technology now and get its own data.  They usually spend $700/year on textbooks, but the $500 Kindle DX may save them money, long-range.

 One student likes the lack of eyestrain from the e-ink screen because the experience feels closer to reading on paper than on a computer screen but she finds the small keyboard impractical.
  Also mentioned was that the university prints about 16 million individual pages, between instructors and students, per year.  This would cut down on that and save about 180 trees.

THE HIGH COST OF TEXTBOOKS
In a PressofAtlanticCity.com's article describing the greed behind the ridiculous pricing of textbooks, the column eventually focuses on lower cost and sometimes free textbooks available.
One big positive of free books is that it gets you out of the horribly exploitative textbook market," wrote Fullerton College professor Ben Crowell in an e-mail. "It's just a scandal that they're charging students as much as $250 for an organic chemistry book, and bringing out a new edition every three years in order to kill off the used book market."

The Yale-educated physics professor began his digital textbook 12 years ago, when his lecture notes "gradually morphed" into a book. His interest in the open-source operating system Linux convinced him that free was the way to go, and his textbook is available for anyone to use at www.lightandmatter.com.

  More than 40 colleges and high schools have adopted the book, according to the Web site.

RESOURCES
1.  Cowell's site at www.theassayer.org  Also, Light and Matter
2.  The Massachusetts Institute of Technology's open courseware site - MIT course materials (textbook and lectures on video) - Free, but no course-credit is given.
3.  Flat World Knowledge, run by former Prentice Hall Business Publishing executives Eric Frank and Jeff Shelstaad, decided to release digital textbooks online for free and sell the extras, such as print copies and study guides.
 Frank says that "About 70 percent of the students who have used the site for class buy products, spending a little more than $30 each, he said. About 40 percent paid about $40 for a printed black-and-white textbook with study aides."
 Another professor appreciates the flexibility of the company's e-books in that professors can rearrange or remove content as appropriate.
4. CourseSmart has an interesting offering although it's not practical on the iPhone as explained vividly by The New York Times's Randall Stross recently.
  Essentially they sell access to e-textbooks for about half the cost of the print version but for only 180 days.
  They have over 7,000 titles while Flat World Knowledge has only 11, but sales for the latter were up 600 percent from last year.

Currently, for a place like Reed College, Amazon pricing for textbooks saves only a few dollars, but Matt Ringle, the Chief Technology Officer there, says
""We're reaching that point where the cost of conventional textbooks has become so astronomical that anybody that provides any relief ... is going to be favorably received by the students."

GREAT LINES FROM MY READING YESTERDAY:
  After seeing that the publishers for the Ted Kennedy book have decided not to release it on the Kindle for fear of losing hard-cover sales (and "The Last Symbol" initially was not set for release on the Kindle for the same reason),
Mike Elgen wrote:
"Publishers need to start viewing eBooks as a business, rather than a threat.  And they need to start thinking about ways to give readers what they want, rather than getting money by withholding from readers what they want.
  Publishers ... it's time for you to embrace the book business.  The story business.  The culture business.  The education business."
Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

Friday, August 14, 2009

Random House Releases Kindle & Hardcover "Lost Symbol" Together

Speakeasy's Jeffrey Trachtenberg (WSJ) writes " Kindle Averts Battle Over Dan Brown’s ‘The Lost Symbol.’
  ' Many publishers were eager to see if Random House would challenge Amazon’s strategy of pricing the book industry’s most successful titles at $9.99 for the Kindle e-reader by withholding the e-book edition of Dan Brown’s upcoming novel, “The Lost Symbol.” '
Random House is releasing the Kindle and hardcover versions simultaneously (coincidentally after much ado from customers about ignoring the hardcover edition if so, in which case there'd be less income from and less than excellent publicity for the book).  Random House claims that "security and logistical issues were resolved.
' Some in publishing suggested that Amazon might have responded by disengaging the “buy” button for the physical edition of Mr. Brown’s book. (An Amazon spokesman noted via email that the company has a “longstanding policy of not commenting on our interactions with publishers.”) '
Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

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