Register Guidelines E-Books Today's Posts Search


Wed June 04 2008

Mobigen (KindleCreator) for Linux now available

11:13 AM by wallcraft in E-Book Formats | Kindle Formats

As Hadrian first posted, MobiPocket has release an alpha of mobigen for Linux. See the Mobipocket Developer Center.

I have not tried it on ebooks yet, but running mobigen_linux with no arguments returns:


*************************************
* Kindle Creator V6.01 build 41 *
* Copyright Amazon.com 2003-2007 *
*************************************

Usage : KindleCreator filename.opf/.htm/.html/.epub [-lowpriority] [-nomin] [-c0 or -c1 or c2] [-s0 or -s1 or -s2] [-kindle] [-vouchers=n] [-nocopypaste] [-rebuild] [-onlydeps or -nodeps] [-unicode]
Options:
-c0: no compression
-c1: standard DOC compression
-c2: Mobipocket huffdic compression
-v0: quiet mode
-v1: verbose level one (default)
-v : maximum verbose level
-s0: no security
-s1: encrypted content
-s2: PID secured (retargetable) Mobipocket ebook
-kindle: syntax checking for compatibility with the kindle
-vouchers=n: [by default] use DRM v2 with n vouchers (min = 6).
-nocopypaste: does not allow any copy paste of content in Reader
-nomin: do not minimize version
-rebuild: rebuilds all dependencies
-onlydeps: build only needed dependencies
-nodeps: do not check/build dependencies
-unicode: force build of Unicode book
-lowpriority: set the PRCGEN thread priority to low (background build)
-releasenotes: display release notes
-gif: images are converted to GIF format (no JPEG in the book)

I wonder if Amazon is using Linux servers for their conversions. Does this also work under OSX?

[ 31 replies ]


Next hot cell phone trend: picture books?

03:49 AM by Alexander Turcic in E-Book General | News

So over in the land of the rising sun, where reading novels on your cell might already be so passé, there is a new way to pass the time while you're bored on the subway or waiting for the movie to start: flip through picture books on your cell phone. According to Tokyo Mango:

The picture book will be read page by page, like a kamishibai—no scrolling, just clicking from page to page. It will include both popular children's titles and original content. You can buy them online for 100-200 yen each. The company hopes to have 50 titles and 10,000 downloads by September.

The official press release can be found here (in Japanese).

[via Textually]

[ 7 replies ]


Tue June 03 2008

No updates for current iLiad MobiPocket Reader

10:58 PM by wallcraft in More E-Book Readers | iRex

I originally saw this mentioned on mobipocket's forums, but Karel (iRex Community Manager) in the iRex forum thread When will iRex's version of Mobipocket add features? said:

There will be no new features introduced in the current Mobipocket viewer. The reason for this is because we are working on a viewer frame work. This viewer frame work will make it possible to easily add additional format support by both the community and iRex. In addition each feature developed for the viewer framework will be available to all supported formats.

This is bad news in the short term, since the iLiad MobiPocket reader is very feature poor, but iRex is probably right in the long term to ditch the entire thing and start again.

Is iRex really capable of generating a viewer framework from scratch? I think it would actually be easier, and technically superior, to start over using FBReader as the basis for all viewers. It already meets the "easy to add new formats" and "new features" applies to "all supported formats" criteria. Note that FBReader can now in principle support (licensed) MOBI DRM by distributing a binary only version with this included.

[ 23 replies ]


Flexible computers use displays with any shape

01:55 PM by TadW in E-Book General | News

Imagine computers that adjust their shape according to some computational outcome, or through interactions with users. It's called Kinetic Organic Interface (KOI) and professor Roel Vertegaal is working on this in his Human Media Laboratory at Queens University.

Professor Vertegaal forsees drinks cans with RSS feeds or movie trailers, and touch-sensitive computers that change shape when you need them for different purposes. It's a combination of three-dimensional multi-touch, flexible display technology and smart materials like e-ink. Vertegaal even compares our use of current "flat" computer technology to life in the novel Flatland, and argues that the future is going to be about 3D computing and displays.

Gizmodo

And here is a video demonstrating how crazy this could be...

[ 13 replies ]


Stanford faculty debate the good and bad of e-books

10:51 AM by Alexander Turcic in E-Book General | News

Stanford is one of the universities collaborating with Google on the ambitious plan to digitize large numbers of books from the university's libraries. But little has been said yet how this digitized material will be used. The Stanford Daily reports that members of Stanford faculty are not sure about this either and that they disagree to some extent.

Proponent of the project have always argued that the project will provide well-indexed digital books for researchers and "mitigate the need to move books off campus". Neither claim is undisputed, though.

Some faculty members, however, worry that the digitization of books may lead to even more texts being removed from campus. History Prof. Philippe Buc argued that reading and assimilating the content in books on a computer screen is significantly different from having the book physically present. He cited the difficulty of annotating texts on the screen, which he felt was key to reflection on contents and preparation for discussion. ...

Buc admitted that digitization could have some benefits, but stood by his support for hard copies of texts.

“Digitization should be a servant of traditional scholarship, not a goal in itself,” he said. “We can be intelligent about this, but we cannot be mindlessly utopian. One thing I would advocate is a new undergraduate and graduate library containing the best books for teaching and paper research, on the model of Yale’s new Cross-Campus library. We would just need to duplicate Yale’s shelf-list and add in the areas we teach in that Yale does not teach in.”

I admit, when it comes to research, I am still a paper magnet. Nothing is more satisfying than going through a stack of books and flipping through pages to find relevant information. Others may disagree, but I hope that Google Books and all other related projects will never lead to a decrease in available paper books in libraries.

[ 47 replies ]


Borders revives online shop - gets flashy with Magic Shelf

10:20 AM by Alexander Turcic in E-Book General | News

Last week, Borders jumped back into online retailing with the official launch of their new Borders.com online store, which has been under development for the past 18 months. Previously, the bookseller redirected their online customers to Amazon as a partner site.

Perhaps one of the most unique features is the flash-based Magic Shelf, which is supposed to enable you to browse and discover titles much the same way you would look for books in a neighborhood brick-and-mortar store.

But is this enough to compete with Amazon, the dominating player in the online book-selling market?

A question for you: When you consider buying a book today, does your mind work in the "bookshelf mode", guided by serendipity where you grab for a book whose title or cover you find most intriguing? Or do you work in the newer "Amazon mode", where you think in categories and browse by ranking and recommendations?

[via AP and Techdirt]

[ 37 replies - poll! ]


Research Libraries Embrace E-Books

03:14 AM by TeamCA in E-Book General | News

The Chronicle of Higher Education (May 30, 2008) reports that almost 70% of research libraries plan to increase spending on ebooks, with non-US libraries more likely to adopt ebooks. The problem is not complex charts and color photos but copyright issues holding back publishers, according to the comments.

Excerpt from "Library Use of E-books":

More than half of all patrons reported either extensive or significant use of e-reference books, and nearly a quarter of the college libraries in the sample reported that their patrons used e-books quite extensively. ... Fiction e-books were not used extensively and close to 71% of libraries said that they were used little. Less than 10% reported extensive or significant use of fiction e-books.

[ 2 replies ]


Mon June 02 2008

Faux Folders Found for Mobipocket

09:35 PM by Nate the great in E-Book General | News

I wanted to make sure everyone saw this.

The Kindle, like any other Mobipocket device, does not support folders in the menu. One thing it can do that's close to a folder is group various issues of a magazine or newspaper under a single title. If you select it, you will see all the issues of that periodical. This is very similar to "Collections" on the Sony Reader.

You might not know about MobiPerl. It's a pretty good Mobi ebook publisher, written in Perl. If you use it to change several Mobi ebooks to the same title (say "Honorverse") and change the booktype to "NEWS", the changed ebooks will appear to be in a folder titled Honorverse. The exact command is discussed here:
https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho...672#post192672

Here's why I wanted everyone to know about this: Does your Mobipocket device support this feature? I want everyone to try it. I would, but I'm still learning how to run MobiPerl. Could someone post a set of modified ebooks for those who don't know how to use MobiPerl?

Does MobiDesktop support this? How about the Blackberry? Cybook?

[ 6 replies ]




live view Latest Forum Activity
Thread / Thread Starter Last Post
Forum: Lounge
Today 11:45 AM
by jbjb (#81) Go to first new post
Today 11:43 AM
by ZodWallop (#760) Go to first new post
Forum: PocketBook
Today 11:27 AM
by rkomar (#3) Go to first new post
Forum: Tolino
Today 11:10 AM
by WolfgangS (#55) Go to first new post
Forum: Amazon Kindle
Today 11:06 AM
by davedeacon (#22) Go to first new post
Forum: Editor
Today 11:02 AM
by theducks (#7) Go to first new post
Today 10:59 AM
by kukulis (#6428) Go to first new post
Forum: Sigil
Today 10:51 AM
by KevinH (#118) Go to first new post
Forum: justRead.app
Today 10:50 AM
by petrjahoda (#9) Go to first new post
Forum: Conversion
Today 10:46 AM
by 5aLIVE (#2) Go to first new post
Today 10:37 AM
by ZodWallop (#3247) Go to first new post
Forum: Lounge
Today 10:25 AM
by pdurrant (#158950) Go to first new post
Today 10:12 AM
by astrangerhere (#17) Go to first new post
Forum: Server
Today 09:59 AM
by PiperKev (#10) Go to first new post
Forum: Plugins
Today 09:36 AM
by JimmXinu (#11801) Go to first new post
Forum: Sigil
Today 09:30 AM
by KevinH (#1) Go to first new post
Forum: ePub Books
Today 09:06 AM
by elibrarian (#0) Go to first new post
Forum: ePub Books
Today 09:00 AM
by elibrarian (#0) Go to first new post
Today 08:59 AM
by salty-horse (#9992) Go to first new post
Today 08:58 AM
by astrangerhere (#42) Go to first new post
Forum: ePub Books
Today 08:56 AM
by elibrarian (#0) Go to first new post
Forum: Lounge
Today 08:51 AM
by JSWolf (#38782) Go to first new post
Forum: ePub Books
Today 08:48 AM
by elibrarian (#0) Go to first new post
Forum: Related Tools
Today 08:42 AM
by wildfire070 (#347) Go to first new post
Forum: ePub Books
Today 08:42 AM
by elibrarian (#0) Go to first new post


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:01 PM.
MobileRead.com is a privately owned, operated and funded community.