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USB – the next generation?

I was checking the Broad Universe mailing list and was excited to hear a new idea for selling and distributing e-books: USB drives.  Branded USB drives are becoming available from a variety of sources, with many different styles and colors; you can even create your own custom shapes.  To make a long story short, you can do almost anything with the external look of the drive.
Writers also have a wealth of options when it comes to the files loaded on drives.  You can load your drives with a single book, or all of the books in a series, or even an anthology.  This customization would provide an individualized product, one that also takes advantage of the growing use of computers.
Are USB drives cost effective for solo writers?  Probably not.  It seems fairly typical for sellers to charge around $11 per drive with a minimum order of 50 drives; this means you have to be confident you can sell at least 50, and at a higher price so you can at least earn a profit.  Selling CDs loaded with your book may remain the safer way to sell your work in a self-publishing situation.
Despite the cost, I think it’s a valid idea for publishers (and writers that can afford it) to explore.  USB drives may cost a little more, but imagine a Golden Snitch-shaped drive loaded with all seven Harry Potter books or a steampunk novel loaded onto an airship drive.  Different USB keys could be designed as collectors items, increasing the visibility of the brand and leading to widespread distribution of the book.  There are already some new products taking advantage of the movie market.  Why not the realm of publishing?

Mourning the Courier

Unfortunately the Courier, Microsoft’s folding tablet and intended rival for the iPad, has been scrapped. The Courier was never officially acknowledged by Microsoft before the cancellation of the project, though it now admits that the tablet had been partially developed.
After seeing Engadget’s mock-up of the Courier and its functions (including touch and pen capabilities), I was chomping at the bit to get one.  The Courier seemed to be an e-reader/computer with unique capabilities for hand-written notes and sketches.  These new features would be a boon for writers, who could use the Courier for writing down spur-of-the-moment notes, as well as e-books (in a more traditional book-like form) and all the usual computer functions.
Microsoft has mentioned that ideas from the Courier will be considered in future projects.  Hopefully a new innovative tablet will bring the same writer-friendly features to the market and if so, I’ll be the first in line.
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Rounding out the pack

There are plenty of new e-readers ready to take their place in the market, sporting new features and lower prices to entice consumers away from the usual big hitters.  Pandigital now offers a full-color touchscreen to challenge the iPad’s look, while the Kobo e-reader prepares to take on the Kindle at a much-reduced price.
At $150, the Kobo is the first real answer to calls for an affordable e-reader for the masses.  Reviews acknowledge that it does not have the same user-friendly wireless downloading or sleek interface, but the Kobo seems to work well enough for the average reader.  Many formats, including ePub, are supported by the device and the Kobo seems poised to make its name in the market.
The Kobo’s reduced functionality bring up the question of what matters more to consumers: features or price?  It seems to depend on whom you ask.  Personally, I love all the features that the iPad can offer, as well as the interface and downloading on my Kindle.  As a younger consumer with less money to spend, however, price is a big consideration.  Sure I love my Kindle, but if it wasn’t a gift would I have bought it?  Probably not.  In fact, I have a feeling that I would be seriously considering the Kobo right now.
What matters more to you, higher functionality or an affordable price?  Do you think there is there a happy medium that we’re missing in the market today?

Beefing up the Kindle

Amazon has just announced a new firmware update that will add functionality to the Kindle (thanks to ebookNewser for the link).  Kindle users will now be able to group their books into collections, use an improved PDF reader, and share passages directly with Twitter and Facebook followers.  This seems to be Amazon’s initial answer to the iPad, though the Kindle is still far from the capabilities of the Apple juggernaut.
As a Kindle owner, I’m glad to see that Amazon has begun to step up and offer new features.  I’m most excited for the chance to group my books, which would make them infinitely easier to find.  The Twitter and Facebook capabilities sound pretty interesting too, but I’m skeptical about how it will actually manifest; I have a feeling that the length of the shared passages will be severely limited, just like the current text-to-speech function. A better PDF reader will also be a boon for the device, given the poor performance of the current one.
Even with all these updates, it’s still up in the air if consumers interested in the iPad will be swayed by the lesser (but growing) capabilities of the Kindle.  Would book collections and Twitter/Facebook sharing entice you towards the Amazon camp?
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Full-scale interactivity is on the horizon

Nathan Bransford’s excellent blog directed my attention to the Alice in Wonderland app for the iPad, which pushes past current e-book boundaries.  The visuals are beautiful and look outrageously fun to play with.
Alice For the iPad
All kinds of books would be enhanced with this technology, but I’d love to see this interactivity with a book like Ender’s Game.  Playing with formations in the battle room, anyone?  Speculative fiction is definitely going to benefit from more e-books like Alice as interactivity rises.

E-ink: Easy on the Eyes

Now that the iPad has officially launched, there’s lots of talk about how e-reader competitors will respond.  Their best bet seems to be addressing readers’ concerns about the iPad before Apple can respond with an updated model that takes advantage of the e-book market.  One of the main problems serious readers have with the iPad is the LCD screen, which is hard to read in direct sunlight and contributes to eye strain.  E-ink displays, like those seen on the Kindle and Nook, are much easier on the eyes and can be read in sunlight.  Skeptics say that despite these boons, the black and white screens are the soon-to-be-extinct dinosaurs of the industry.
But e-ink has already begun its evolution.  The black-and-white screens of the Kindle and Sony Reader will eventually be overtaken by the color e-ink currently being developed by Liquavista, Blio, Asus, and others.   It’s hard to say if Amazon or Barnes & Noble have considered adding color e-ink to the next generation of Kindles and Nooks; in any case, they will eventually need to add this feature if they want to compete with e-ink or LCD color screens that are flooding the market.  With color options, the industry-leading e-readers will be able to compete in the textbook market and possibly in the development of enhanced e-books.  Though it’s true that the iPad addresses a different part of the market with its internet capabilities, its dominance in the e-reader arena is not guaranteed, especially with color e-ink on the rise.

Show Me the Video: Novels and Videography

Adam flinched as something hissed in the dark hallway.  He grabbed a heavy stone pedestal and jammed it against the door, nearly unending the gargoyle statute sitting on top.
A video, nestled within the e-book’s text, begins to run with slow, grainy flickering.  It shows smoke floating under a thick wooden door, twisting upwards to wrap around a gargoyle statue perched on a low pedestal.  The statute slowly blinks and then grins widely up at you, the reader, before springing out at the camera.
Dream or reality?  On the dominant e-readers of today (the Kindle and Nook) this scenario is fiction.  Embedded video is not supported by Amazon’s AMZ-formatted books.  The Nook uses the popular ePub format – which can support embedded video – but does not support videos on the device.  Apple’s iPad offers a potential step forward, utilizing the ePub format while also possessing the capability to run videos.
It is not clear, however, if the iPad will make use of this capability.  Steve Jobs announced that there will be no Flash support on the first generation of the iPad.  This poses a problem to potential author/videographers, as Flash is the most popular format for videos embedded into ePub files.  Unless the iPad offers Flash in a later generation, it may be only another baby step toward fully-integrated collaborations between authors and other artists.
What if a device launches that does support embedded Flash video?  Would you, as an author, be interested in inserting video into your novel?  On one hand, the concept is compelling because video could add intense visuals to help establish and maintain a novel’s mood.  Add too many videos, however, and they could smother well-crafted description and take away the reader’s opportunity to imagine the story in their own way.  As we wait for new generations of the iPad and its competitors to provide a video option, it is worth examining the potential new art of mixing novels and videos, and how it would affect creativity and quality.

Evolution of the E-book

David Baldacci is leading the charge toward enriched content e-books with his new novel, “Deliver Us from Evil”.  In addition to a typical e-book format, “Deliver Us from Evil” will be available in an enriched format that includes audio and video interviews, deleted passages, and reference pictures.  The enriched e-book release coincides nicely with the April 3rd release of the iPad, which will bring new functionality to e-readers (though its current stranglehold on enhanced e-book capabilities may be challenged by HP’s Slate and Samsung’s slate in the coming year).  In any case, the e-book world is about to evolve as technology pushes it toward more and more sophisticated applications.
As much as I love my Kindle, I am looking forward to the new features on the horizon.  Author interviews and “deleted scenes” are definitely interesting, but what about the more collaborative aspect inherent in the new technology?  Now that the iPad and its competitors support other media forms, the artistic combinations are endless.  Short film makers or animators can team up with authors to create shorts that recreate or enhance the scenes of the novel; artists can create detailed interactive maps for fantasy novels or 3D renderings of futuristic cities that the reader can explore.  These possibilities lead to valid concerns about intellectual property rights and what the core essence of a book should be, but I’m looking forward to where future growth of the e-book will take us.
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