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#91 | |
Avid reader
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Karma: 6399168
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: UK
Device: Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 / Kindle Paperwhite / TCL Nxtpaper 14
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For info I am peripherally involved in single source to multiple output publishing in higher education - we go from quasi-XML to online PDF, print PDF, epub, content managed VLE sites and probably other formats that I don't know about. We've gone through (and are still going through) a lot of pain trying to morph a print-centric process into a multi-output one. Andrew |
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#92 | |
Feral Underclass
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Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Yorkshire, tha noz
Device: 2nd hand paperback
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#93 | |
Resident Curmudgeon
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts
Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3
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#94 | |
Resident Curmudgeon
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts
Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3
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But, that aside, why would the editors get pissed off? Personally, I find it easy enough to shrug it off if it's something I didn't do wrong. |
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#95 | |
Fanatic
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Karma: 2530000
Join Date: Dec 2010
Device: Sony PRS-T3, PRS-650, Vaio Tap 11, iPad Mini
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Anyway, why should I as the end consumer really care about production processes? I don't have to wonder about how the manufacturer of my washing machine meets his production challenges, so why should I do so with ebooks? As I have bought recent releases of ebooks that didn't even have usable metadata I have the impression that some publishers do not even take basic care about what they sell to the customer. Last edited by CommonReader; 10-25-2011 at 09:09 AM. |
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#96 | |
Feral Underclass
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Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Yorkshire, tha noz
Device: 2nd hand paperback
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#97 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: SF Bay Area, California, USA
Device: Pocketbook Touch HD3 (Past: Kobo Mini, PEZ, PRS-505, Clié)
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This is a page from "Tales of Hoffman - Trial of the Chicago 8 7", which is not in the public domain, but majority of the text is, because trial transcripts are public domain. I figure that a page for educational purposes falls well within fair use, for the thirty words that may not be part of the transcript. (It's possible all of it is transcript.) The PDF was scanned at 400dpi in Acrobat Pro (Which isn't the best, but is tolerable); the Word doc is auto-read in Finereader 7, after removing the page number. For this one, read quality's great; line breaks and the separating asterisks are the big problem. Second sample is from "Magic and Fetishism," a public domain work available through Archive.org. This one has more obvious problems. Extra punctuation caused by dots on the page, the foreign words are mostly misspelled, the punctuation is often wrong. And this is a good, clear scan of text that isn't tightly condensed. Next sample: from Inglis' "Principles of Secondary Education," another PD book. This one's a nightmare for conversion; lots of tiny text in charts & tables. I don't do most of the corrections in Word; I do them in Finereader, where I can see the text next to the scans, but that's not always an option. |
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#98 | |
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Device: K2, iPad, KFire, PPW, Voyage, NookColor. 2 Droid, Oasis, Boox Note2
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In a word (vis-a-vis, "is the source-to-PDF process so horrendously hand-cranked that you only want to do it once?")...yes. We never started out to be a print or POD house. As I said, we're geeks, not publishers. The angst we've gone through, trying to make a decent-looking POD product, as part of, not in lieu of, an ebook process has been surprising to us, as well. We had so many requests for it (and intially, because people would ask AFTER their epubs/mobi's were done, we were reverse-engineering it) that we caved and started that process...the only way it really works is to edit the source (which at this point--the PDF point--is actually in OO, specifically due to some Word bugginess that doesn't facilitate output to PDF properly) and re-output the PDF--and then find where the next problem with hyphenation or Orphans, etc., occurs. ALSO: vis-a-vis xml->xslt, man, I had high hopes for those, I really did. However, given all the mystery effluvia that Apple does over here, and Amazon over there, and Nook (with the dreaded RMSDK from hell) doesn't allow over THAR, (or, rather, allows but doesn't display correctly), I don't see xml translations really working. Geeeze, I wish they did. @mrploppy: Yes, we could kern it "slightly," but in many cases, it's either impractical or...whatever. There's a reason that print layout people, who do nothing BUT this, get as much money as they do. I know I was shocked when I first tried to find print layout services--as a consultant service--for some of my clients. Most of my clients, who are small imprints or self-pubs, can't afford a grand-to-$2500 (or more) for print layout. So they use us--or they pay Createspace $400 or $600 bucks for the whole enchilada. @CommonReader: As I'm not a publisher, I can't speak to that. The initial gist of the thread wasn't about processes, but it came up, as to "how simple it is to..." and I thought some perspective on what really happens in "the making of..." would be useful. @Elfwreck: thanks, I should have thought of some DP texts--but I'm scrounging some up from various commercial buddies, replete with the dreaded Abbyy "red," which I think will be interesting to those who've never proofed genuinely raw output. Maybe not. |
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#99 | |
Wizard
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Location: Washington, DC
Device: Ipad, IPhone
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I think it amazing, really, that folks who never published or proof read an ebook can tell people who do this for a living that they don't known what they are doing and that they need to change their process. What the hell ? Would they tell their doctors or plumbers how to do their work in such preremptory fashion? Doubt it. |
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#100 | |
Guru
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Join Date: May 2010
Device: Kobo Aura, Nokia Lumia 920 (Freda)
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Either you've just been lucky, or you're only buying new release novels that are following a modern workflow as Hitch has already explained. Backlist novels don't fare nearly so well, and yet we're still expected to spend $10-15 on them. Any other product with that level of quality would be quickly returned to stores. Fortunately for publishers, only Amazon has a generous return policy. Others, like Barnes & Noble, don't allow any returns at all (though you can try to sweet talk customer support). Also, not every new-release book is error free, either. I just finished a book (to remain nameless, but it's not Cormac McCarthy who's allowed to write like an infant because he's earned it) where every single instance of a "X have" contraction that should've been "X've" was written as "X of". "Would of", "could of", "I'd of" (which should've been "I'd have"), etc. The first one occurred in the first couple of pages as part of dialogue and I let it go. But it soon happened outside of dialogue (so it was not an affectation of speech) and quickly grated on my nerves. For my own sanity, I edited the book myself and fixed all of those instances. Now to be fair I'm pretty sure this was just as poorly written on paper (and it was a NY Times best seller of 2009!), but the instances of "te le vision" and multiple other improperly-added spaces were definitely ebook artifacts. |
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#101 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: SF Bay Area, California, USA
Device: Pocketbook Touch HD3 (Past: Kobo Mini, PEZ, PRS-505, Clié)
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It's definitely worth mentioning that scan quality makes a *lot* of difference, and from what I can tell, some publishing houses are using the default settings to scan at 200dpi, which on some documents, is going to get i's turned into :'s and h's turned into li's. (Even for good scans, some fonts turn up a lot of "tlie" instead of "the.") FWIW, I recognize a few OCR errors now & then in ebooks I buy (I can tell which authors converted their backlists from scans), but nothing egregious. I gather the worst of the errors are mainstream publishers--because individual authors glance over their book before they release it; the errors are buried in the middle rather than on the title page... like "Tha Hobbit." (Instead, I run across characters whose arms have faded cigarette bums. Or who are using modem birth control methods.) |
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#102 | |
Guru
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Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Norman, OK
Device: Sony PRS 350, 900, 950; Kindles (ALL of them!); Kobo Aura One
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#103 |
Evangelist
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Join Date: Dec 2009
Device: back to x51v
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I lay the blame directly on the world-wide shortage of white-out and red cellophane.
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#104 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Oct 2010
Device: Kindle Fire, Kindle Paperwhite, AGPTek Bluetooth Clip
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#105 |
Banned
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Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Mountain House, CA
Device: kindle
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I think printed books go through long process of proof reading and editing. eBooks is a quick publication that any one can do. It's over used; and quality suffers in terms of production and content, IMO.
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Ebooks filled with typos and bad formatting, is it unavoidable? | Algiedi | General Discussions | 70 | 08-02-2011 11:07 AM |
Your kindle has 3 GB capacity, how is yours filled? | arfarf624 | Amazon Kindle | 22 | 07-26-2011 02:30 PM |
Finally filled up my Kindle 2 | sirbruce | Amazon Kindle | 22 | 01-13-2010 12:27 AM |
What is the process for reporting errors in ebooks from Amazon? | chilady1 | Amazon Kindle | 7 | 07-22-2009 01:49 AM |
Errors in Baen 's eBooks? | JSWolf | Reading Recommendations | 19 | 07-15-2009 09:54 AM |