Lulu Takes On Amazon In eBooks
The Raleigh-based online book publisher is now selling electronic books by traditional authors, expanding beyond its lineup of self-published titles f...
The Raleigh-based online book publisher is now selling electronic books by traditional authors, expanding beyond its lineup of self-published titles f...
PC World | David Coursey | Posted 11.02.2009 | Books
Just because a Flurry study found that more book apps than games were developed for the iPhone over the past four months does not mean the Kindle and ...
Gerald Sindell | Posted 11.02.2009 | Books
When we buy a copy of a book, we own that copy. When we purchase, for almost as many dollars, a Kindle or other electronic version of a book, we have not really bought a copy of the book.
Jean Naggar | Posted 10.30.2009 | Books
As we head at a fast clip into an unimaginable future, we need to keep a clear vision and a firm grip on what had meaning in the past. The desire to shape and share our stories is embedded in our DNA.
PC Magazine | Tim Bajarin | Posted 10.26.2009 | Books
There is, however, a device on the horizon that could really disrupt the e-reader market, and may even render them irrelevant in the near future. The ...
David Rothman | Posted 10.22.2009 | Books
Suppose a well-stocked national digital library system existed for Americans of different ages, along with the means to encourage schoolchildren and others to use it.
The Huffington Post | Jessie Kunhardt | Posted 10.22.2009 | Books
Yesterday, Barnes & Noble unveiled their new eReader, the Nook. The sleek new model is the latest in a series of new eReaders popping up recently to c...
TIME | Adam Rose | Posted 10.13.2009 | Books
Amazon is about to be attacked by a squadron of would-be Kindle killers that are being brought to market by some of the biggest names in consumer elec...
Jane Isay | Posted 10.09.2009 | Books
I read like a madwoman. I would get drowsy, and on those long reading afternoons when the Kindle slipped from my hand, it fell silently on the pillow and I slept.
Steve Ross | Posted 10.08.2009 | Books
I have noticed over the past few years a troubling trend entering the picture, a trend that is encapsulated in the blogs posted by Chip O'Brien and Mark Coker.
Computer World | Matt Hamblen | Posted 10.02.2009 | Books
Amazon.com Inc. has agreed to pay $150,000 to settle a federal lawsuit brought by a Michigan high school student and an California academic whose elec...
Bianca Bosker | Posted 10.01.2009 | Technology
Justin D. Gawronski, a high school senior from Michigan, has just made history, twice: not only did he settle a lawsuit that forced Amazon.com to clar...
The Guardian | Charles Arthur | Posted 10.01.2009 | Books
The Bookseller magazine says that "authoritative sources" have told it that Amazon will "finally announce the arrival" of the Kindle 2 e-book in the U...
Telegraph | Posted 09.16.2009 | Technology
The Kindle edition of Dan Brown's The Lost Symbol, his follow-up to 2003's smash hit The Da Vinci Code, has become the top-selling item on Amazon.com....
nytimes.com | Joe Hutsko | Posted 10.17.2009 | Green
A new study analyzing the Amazon Kindle electronic book reader's impact on the environment suggests that, on average, the carbon emitted over the life...
AllThingsD | Peter Kafka | Posted 09.14.2009 | Media
Whatever happened to Amazon's plan to work with the New York Times (NYT) and the Washington Post (WPO) to bundle newspaper subscriptions with its jumb...
Alex Green | Posted 09.12.2009 | Business
Like the auto companies before them, Internet retailers used your roads, your government, and your tax subsidized infrastructure to support non-viable companies that killed your local businesses. Nothing in life, as the saying goes, is free.
Jonathan A. Schein | Posted 09.08.2009 | Green
Preserving books is one of our most important duties if we are going remain relevant in the eyes of future societies.
Marc Hershon | Posted 08.18.2009 | Media
Amazon slapped my sense of ownership and control across the face yesterday when I learned they reached right into the Kindles of anumber of customers and deleted -- irony of ironies -- copies of George Orwell's 1984.
New York Times | Brad Stone | Posted 08.18.2009 | Media
In George Orwell's "1984," government censors erase all traces of news articles embarrassing to Big Brother by sending them down an incineration chute...
Giles Slade | Posted 08.01.2009 | Media
The Kindle is for the book-lover who might buy a first, a signed or a special edition. It is lingerie. It is a box of chocolates or a bottle of double-malt. Competition will drive it to adapt, and it will.
New York Times | ANDREW ADAM NEWMAN | Posted 07.16.2009 | Media
A recent reading in Manhattan at the Strand bookstore by David Sedaris, whose most recent book is "When You Are Engulfed in Flames," may have offered ...
Dan Dubno | Posted 06.08.2009 | Media
Everyone who has predicted the demise of paper has so far been completely wrong. But that was before the advent of a fully-functional full-figured e-book reader.
NY Times | TIM ARANGO | Posted 06.08.2009 | Media
But if the Kindle, which not only displays the news but also speaks it with a computerized voice, is ever to be the savior of print media, it needs to...
New York Times | BRAD STONE and MOTOKO RICH | Posted 06.06.2009 | Media
On Wednesday, Amazon introduced a larger version of the Kindle, pitching it as a new way for people to read textbooks, newspapers and documents. ...
News & Observer | ALAN M. WOLF | Posted 11.04.2009 | Books