|  08-27-2009, 07:40 PM | #226 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 5,187 Karma: 25133758 Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: SF Bay Area, California, USA Device: Pocketbook Touch HD3 (Past: Kobo Mini, PEZ, PRS-505, Clié) | Quote: 
 The 6" e-ink reader dominates the market; obviously, a lot of people like it. It's also clear that a lot of people would like a letter-sized reader--but that doesn't mean the 5" or 6" readers are "cheap early prototypes;" they're a very comfortable and useful size. They're not a comfortable size for *printed books.* If you want to convince people that PDFs are the best ebook format, start by convincing publishers to release their PDF ebooks formatted for 6" reader screens. After people have read dozens of novels that worked well on the hardware they have, and compare those to epub & mobi books of the same content, they'll be more convinced that typography is important. Right now, the choice is mostly between "good typography at a size that involves eyestrain" and "default computer typography at a size I can read." (While you're at it, convince ebook reader manufacturers that 300 dpi really would be much better. Because a lot of the features of good typography are lost when the serifs are blurry.) The tech to support PDF as the best ebook format is almost here. (It's waiting on better DPI support.) However, the market support for it is nonexistant... publishers often don't put title & author metadata in their PDFs; I don't think you can effectively argue that they'll format them to fit different screens. Or to fit ANY screens... right now, no commercial PDFs fit properly on any of the available ebook screens. | |
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|  08-27-2009, 07:45 PM | #227 | |
| Banned            Posts: 5,100 Karma: 72193 Join Date: Feb 2009 Location: South of the Border Device: Coffin | Quote: 
 PDF is the B&W 4:3 TV, fixed, looks stupid when you play a 16:9 movie upon it. The Widescreen on the other hand is ePub, able to flawlessly scale from 4:3 to 16:9 and accomadate both with only minimal loss of quality.   | |
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|  08-27-2009, 09:41 PM | #228 | 
| Addict            Posts: 292 Karma: 24688 Join Date: Aug 2009 Device: Sony PRS-505, iPad | 
			
			That's the whole point to TeX. There's no need for mobile reader manufacturers to have to develop their own layout engine that in the end does nothing more (and probably does a great deal less) than TeX. That's kind of like reinventing the wheel. No wait, it is EXACTLY like reinventing the wheel. The layout engines that are currently used in any mobile reader you can find are like chipping flint arrowheads in the stone age compared to what a TeX implementation could do. They've got a LONG way to go to produce an engine that delivers pleasing layout.
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|  08-27-2009, 11:17 PM | #229 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 5,187 Karma: 25133758 Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: SF Bay Area, California, USA Device: Pocketbook Touch HD3 (Past: Kobo Mini, PEZ, PRS-505, Clié) | Quote: 
 Is it something I could easily format my own ebooks for? Part of why I use PDFs is that I'm very comfortable formatting Word docs for conversion to PDF; I don't have any HTML-editing software that's nearly as easy to work with, so I don't format for ePub & mobi. (Or, possibly, I just haven't been trained on the software I have.) Do Word docs convert fluently to TeX docs, if the interpreting device has the right software? | |
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|  08-28-2009, 05:58 AM | #230 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 4,338 Karma: 4000000 Join Date: Oct 2008 Location: Paris Device: Cybooks; Sony PRS-T1 | Quote: 
 Pdf might sounds nice because it's probably the ones used for printed edition. But if the publishers wants to make pdf for 6", they're most likley to be badly formated (And there, you're screwed, see point one). | |
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|  08-28-2009, 07:50 AM | #231 | |
| Banned            Posts: 2,094 Karma: 2682 Join Date: Aug 2009 Device: N/A | Quote: 
 And like PDF, TeX is designed to produce pages which look good on a single size of page. It's popular in exactly the same fields where PDF is popular - academic and technical publications. It is not a deacent way of handling situations like...oh...ereaders where reflow is used. | |
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|  08-28-2009, 08:32 AM | #232 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,260 Karma: 3439432 Join Date: Feb 2008 Device: Amazon Kindle Paperwhite (300ppi), Samsung Galaxy Book 12 | 
			
			W/ tagged .pdf, one gets the option of having re-flowability along w/ a perfectly formatted representation. W/ epub and other ebook formats which don't have a concept of size and position and page, one only gets reflowability, which means that one never gets a perfectly formatted representation, but always has to make do w/ how the page happens to be rendered by the viewer. For me, ``good enough'' isn't. I don't accept anything less than perfect, and there are a number of printed books which I've purchased which I've never been able to finish because the typesetting is so bad --- similarly, I've found a number of ebooks to set so badly that I've been unable to continue reading them. PDF is the only format (w/ matching viewer technology) which offers the level of control which is necessary to prevent stacks, widows, orphans &c. --- EPUB and the like desperately need improvements in their viewers to improve the quality of representation (at a minimum providing user options for justification and the like would be welcome) William | 
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|  08-28-2009, 10:03 AM | #233 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 4,338 Karma: 4000000 Join Date: Oct 2008 Location: Paris Device: Cybooks; Sony PRS-T1 | Quote: 
 And that's the problem. You're all saying ePub is crap. Not true. Adobe's implementation of epUB is. | |
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|  08-28-2009, 10:19 AM | #234 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,260 Karma: 3439432 Join Date: Feb 2008 Device: Amazon Kindle Paperwhite (300ppi), Samsung Galaxy Book 12 | 
			
			I didn't say that epub was worthless --- it's a useful format, just one w/ marked limitations in the currently available viewing programs, and w/ other limitations which no viewing program will be able to resolve for the foreseeable future (there is no extant H&J algorithm which will preclude stacks, and research into page building at the chapter level or higher is still in its infancy --- list of recently published papers here: http://groups.google.com/group/comp....9?dmode=source ) While the vast majority of books may be handled adequately by epub (if one is willing to accept typographic infelicities such as stacks) there are many books which can't be and if those books are to exist in versions readable as ebooks, the only format suitable for them at this time is .pdf William | 
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|  08-28-2009, 10:33 AM | #235 | 
| frumious Bandersnatch            Posts: 7,570 Karma: 20150435 Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Spaniard in Sweden Device: Cybook Orizon, Kobo Aura | 
			
			To be fair, you should compare Adobe-rendered ePUBs not with carefully crafted PDFs, but with default letter-size, Arial-type, MSWord-created PDFs...
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|  08-28-2009, 11:28 AM | #236 | ||||
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 5,187 Karma: 25133758 Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: SF Bay Area, California, USA Device: Pocketbook Touch HD3 (Past: Kobo Mini, PEZ, PRS-505, Clié) | Quote: 
 Setting tags properly is an exercise in masochistic nit-picky work. I've done it, and I'd do it again... for a book I dearly loved, or if someone paid me. A lot. I wouldn't do it for book conversions for the general public. Quote: 
 Quote: 
 Quote: 
 Some PDFs have orphans & widows before reflow, because the decision to prevent them has to be made by the creator of the PDF. I have Acrobat Pro and lock-breaking software; I add tags to my PDFs before reading. And fix the metadata, so they don't show up on my reader with names like "0689865384_INT," which is one I downloaded this week. And I add bookmarks so I'll have a TOC. Any argument that I shouldn't reflow, presumes that someone is going to provide PDFs that fit in my screen. Since publishers can't be bothered to set the metadata and add a table of contents, I'm not holding my breath on that one. Feel free to convince the publishers to make PDFs that fit in mobile ebook devices; there'd be a lot less arguments against PDFs if they were offered in several sizes. (And, of course, if the buyer were allowed enough page sizes to fit each of her screens.) | ||||
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|  08-28-2009, 12:30 PM | #237 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,260 Karma: 3439432 Join Date: Feb 2008 Device: Amazon Kindle Paperwhite (300ppi), Samsung Galaxy Book 12 | 
			
			I didn't say all .pdfs were perfect, merely that .pdf is the only format which allows a level of control which allows one to achieve perfection. I'm not seeing anywhere in epub a control which will allow me to detect and prevent stacks --- where are the controls in epub which allow for contextual information on how text formatted at a given size is at such and such a position? William | 
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|  08-28-2009, 12:45 PM | #238 | 
| eReader            Posts: 2,750 Karma: 4968470 Join Date: Aug 2007 Device: Note 5; PW3; Nook HD+; ChuWi Hi12; iPad | 
			
			While PDF at its best is much better than other formats - such as EPUB - I would say that in excess of 95% of the PDFs available are much worse.  I'm not going to recommend a format that could be better but is almost guaranteed to be worse. I see no need to spend as much time as it takes to read a novel in preparing it for my reader. Perfection is a worthy goal - but rarely attainable - and perfectly typeset but unreadable on my device is worthless to me. | 
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|  08-28-2009, 01:35 PM | #239 | |
| Addict            Posts: 292 Karma: 24688 Join Date: Aug 2009 Device: Sony PRS-505, iPad | Quote: 
 Advantages to Tex: it's free, and it produces high-quality professional typesetting suitable for commercial publication. Many major academic journals require article submissions in TeX. It's second-to-none at quality equation typesetting for math journals, which was, unsurprisingly, why TeX was initially written. Disadvantages: Steep, steep, steep learning curve. You can produce a pretty high-quality typeset page within a few minutes, but to move beyond the basics essentially requires reading a book about it. No WYSIWYG editor, just marked-up plain text. As to whether your Word docs would translate to TeX, the answer would be not without a conversion tool. There may be one out there in academia-land; I wouldn't be surprised if someone has written something like that. I've never had the need for such a tool, however, so I've never looked for one. | |
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|  08-28-2009, 01:46 PM | #240 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,260 Karma: 3439432 Join Date: Feb 2008 Device: Amazon Kindle Paperwhite (300ppi), Samsung Galaxy Book 12 | 
			
			There's a commercial Word -> TeX conversion tool which is quite good, Chikri Software's TeX2Word. The freeware rtf2latex works reasonably well though. WYSIWYG is the wrong approach to take w/ TeX --- the LyX project's ``What You See Is What You Mean'' is much more appropriate: http://www.lyx.org People here may be interested in this though: http://www.tei-c.org/Tools/Stylesheets/ (specifically the TEI to LaTeX stylesheet) Sample documents made using (La)TeX: http://www.tug.org/texshowcase/ (ob. discl. I have a few documents in there, most notably _The Book of Tea_) William | 
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