Thursday, November 15, 2007

eBooks About Everything and RSS feeds

Since we added the Subscribe to RSS Feeds tab in the eBooks About Everything store, my friends and family keep asking to explain RSS to them. Here are a few of the questions with my answers.

Q: What does RSS mean? A: RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication or Rich Site Summary.

Q: What does that mean and what does it do? A: The basic function of an RSS feed is to bring you news headlines. Instead doing a check of your favorite new sites or blogs you can anonymously "subscribe" so that as new information is added the headline is sent out as news.

Q: Why should I care, what's in it for me? A: They save you lots of energy and time. Instead of hunting down sites and looking at pages of information; the RSS feed gives you “just the facts” in headline form. For example, I read many newspapers and blogs everyday – the New York Times, Salon, the Wall Street Journal, the XML report and Publishers Weekly. I used to have to remember to go check them; now I sit back and wait for the news comes to me.

Q: How do I see the RSS feed? A: Use either a reader or an email service. Popular free readers include The Google Reader, Bloglines and SharpReader. A great service is NewsGator and 29.95 or you can use a free services like SendMeRss .

Q: What do you use? A: I have traditionally used Google products – the Google Reader and Feedburner. I prefer email delivery; I want the news to come to my inbox so I am currently testing both NewsGator and SendMeRss. For a real live test of how Feedburner works go to the right side of the blog that says Subscribe via email; enter your email address and give it a road test.

Q: What news does eBooks About Everything put into their RSS feeds? A: Our 57 feeds are updated each morning (at 1:00am) with information about the newest titles added to the store overnight. If you are interested in a special topic like math, education, fiction etc. just subscribe to the appropriate RSS feed to see what eBooks came in while you slept.

For novices who want more info Youtube has a great video on RSS:

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Discounted eBooks - November 14, 2007

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Here are the eBooks you asked for last week. Everything from the Bible to Madonna with a little Rebellion and Death thrown in; evidently some of you are getting read to make Holiday gifts. . . To get your discount on these fabulous tiltes use coupon code CG82N at check out.

Our guarantee: If you have bought one of these titles from eBooks About Everything iin the last 15 days we will gladly offer you a rebate on the book; just contact us
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The Year of Living Biblically: One Man's Humble Quest to Follow the Bible as Literally as Possible eBook edition
by Jacobs, A. J.
Raised in a secular family but increasingly interested in the relevance of faith in our modern world, A.J. Jacobs decides to dive in headfirst and attempt to obey the Bible as literally as possible for one full year. He vows to follow the Ten Commandments. To be fruitful and multiply. To love his neighbor. But also to obey the hundreds of less publicized rules: to avoid wearing clothes made of mixed fibers; to play a ten-string harp; to stone adulterers
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List Price : $l6.99
Your price $14.53 (Using your 10% discount and $ .76 in eBook Reward points)
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Fires of Jubliee eBook Edition
by: Oates, Stephen B.
The bloody slave rebellion led by Nat Turner in Virginia in 1831, and the savage reprisals that followed, shattered beyond repair the myth of the contented slave and the benign master and intensified the forces of change that would plunge America into the bloodbath of the Civil War.
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List Price : $9.95
Your price $7.66 (Using your 10% discount and $ .40 iin eBook Reward points)
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Madonna: Like an Icon
by: O'Brien, Lucy
A groundbreaking biography that finally solves the mystery at the heart of Madonna's chameleonlike existence. Extensively researched and perceptively written by journalist Lucy O'Brien, it explores the complex personality and legendary drive that has made Madonna the most famous female pop artist of our time
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List Price : $19.95
Your price $17.96 (Using your 10% discount and $ .81 in eBook Reward points)
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Creation in Death eBook edition
by: Robb, J. D.
NYPSD Lieutenant Eve Dallas keeps the streets of a near-future New York City safe in this extraordinary series. But even she makes mistakes, and is haunted by those she couldn't save-and the killers she couldn't capture. When the body of a young brunette is found in East River Park, artfully positioned and marked by signs of prolonged and painful torture, Eve is catapulted back to a case nine years earlier.
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List Price : $25.95
Your price $19.97 (Using your 10% discount and $1.05 in eBook Reward points)
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Bath & Body Recipes: Crafts & Crafting: Make Your Own Lotions, Creams, Colognes, Edible Lotions, Sun Tan Lotions, Baby Wipes, Hair Gels, Shampoos
by: Mikos, Tracey
A highly informative, detail-filled eGuide by popular writer Tracey Mikos,author of The Candle Book and Making Your Own Potpourri. Contents: Introduction, Descriptions of Essential Oil and many Recipes
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List Price : $8.95
Your price $7.65 (Using your 10% discount and .40 in eBook Reward points)

Be sure to add your discount request to our NEW google group Go to Discounts on Demand and tell us what you want to see discounted next week

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

The Year of Living Biblically eBook edition

Up front, you have to know that it is unlikely that any one but A.J. Jacobs could get me to pick up a secular book about the Bible. As a PK (Preacher’s Kid), all I can say is “been there; done that.” But a book by A. J. Jacobs is different.

I discovered him a couple of summers ago at the beach. My aunt Amélie handed me A. J. Jacob’s, The Know-It-All a charming and funny memoir about the author’s year of reading the entire Encyclopaedia Britannica – all 30-some volumes. She said, “You have to read this book!" No one argues with 'Auntie 'M'. . .

When I heard that Jacobs had written about a new set of books – the 60+ books of the Bible, I was intrigued. I read the advance reviews of The Year of Living Biblically: One Man's Humble Quest to Follow the Bible as Literally as Possible and decided to put aside my prejudice and give it a try. I read the whole thing over the weekend. And last night I called 'Auntie 'M' to tell her “You have to read this book!

First, I am convinced that Jacob’s is married to a saint! And frankly, I am inclined to recommend the book just so people will buy it to support Julie and their three kids. I’m not sure I could tolerate a living with a perfectly normal neurotic guy, never mind, a man who grows a bushy beard, starts eating strange things, builds tents in my living room, changes his diet and clothing and refuses to take photos. Julie, in my opinion, is the personification of tolerance!

But there are actually many other reasons to read this book.

It is a brilliant analysis of how an ancient book fares in the modern world. It might be easier to read if you know something about the Bible in the first place, but I doubt it is necessary. The fact that Jacobs is a secular Jew and modern agnostic gives this memoir a unique and refreshing perspective. His naiveté is integral to the experience; it saves him from a certain amount of cynicism.

Through out the books I was struck by the respect Jacobs gives the people he meets along his journey: the snake-handling preacher, the Gay Bible study group, a bunch of drunken Hassidic Jews, the curator of a creationist museum, his former uncle. Yes, he meets some off beat and unusual characters and yet he never gives into taking cheap shots, ridicule or judgment.

As Jacobs goes through the year he changes. The very act of trying to live biblically eventually transforms the way he thinks and acts. He faithfully chronicles this change with honesty and a degree of wonder.

There were three main things I carried away from the experience:
  • a whole new understanding of how impossible it is to be a true Fundamentalist
  • how easy it is to use the Bible to “prove” almost anything
  • a new appreciation for the profound and changing effects of spiritual rituals like prayer.

All I can say is: You have read this book!

From the publisher:

From the bestselling author of The Know-It-All comes a fascinating and timely exploration of religion and the Bible.

Raised in a secular family but increasingly interested in the relevance of faith in our modern world, A.J. Jacobs decides to dive in headfirst and attempt to obey the Bible as literally as possible for one full year. He vows to follow the Ten Commandments. To be fruitful and multiply. To love his neighbor. But also to obey the hundreds of less publicized rules: to avoid wearing clothes made of mixed fibers; to play a ten-string harp; to stone adulterers.

The resulting spiritual journey is at once funny and profound, reverent and irreverent, personal and universal and will make you see history's most influential book with new eyes. Jacobs's quest transforms his life even more radically than the year spent reading the entire Encyclopedia Britannica for The Know-It-All. His beard grows so unruly that he is regularly mistaken for a member of ZZ Top. He immerses himself in prayer, tends sheep in the Israeli desert, battles idolatry, and tells the absolute truth in all situations - much to his wife's chagrin.

Throughout the book, Jacobs also embeds himself in a cross-section of Communities that take the Bible literally. He tours a Kentucky-based creationist museum and sings hymns with Pennsylvania Amish. He dances with Hasidic Jews in Brooklyn and does Scripture study with Jehovah's Witnesses. He discovers ancient biblical wisdom of startling relevance. And he wrestles with seemingly archaic rules that baffle the twenty-first-century brain.

Jacobs's extraordinary undertaking yields unexpected epiphanies and challenges. A book that will charm readers both secular and religious, The Year of Living Biblically is part Cliff Notes to the Bible, part memoir, and part look into worlds unimaginable. Thou shalt not be able to put it down!

Monday, November 12, 2007

Norman Mailer

By now you have probably heard of Norman Mailers death and have seen or heard several pieces about his life.

The New York Times had a wonderful piece -- Mailer, Towering Writer With a Matching Ego, Dies at 84 which I highly recommend.

My favorite is the statement by Random House president and publisher Gina Centrello:

"Random House mourns the passing of Norman Mailer, whom we have published since 1984. To us, he was more than an American master and one of the greatest writers of our time. He was a consummate professional, who stimulated us with his passion and ideas and charmed us with his wit and warmth. Whenever he came into our offices, whether to deliver a manuscript or discuss a book jacket, he brought a bottomless love of literature and the written word. We felt privileged to know Norman Mailer the man, who adored his wife and children, who was kind and generous to his friends and colleagues, and who was a working writer until the very end."

That is an obituary to strive for.

Rest In Peace, Norman Mailer.

Friday, November 9, 2007

eBook Reader - My Cybook is here! (Continued)

You didn’t really think I would be able to wait until the weekend to download a book, did you? Of course not! I had to buy at least one book.

The entire process (including looking for books) took less than five minutes. It was the absolute easiest time I have ever had putting an eBook on a new device! Bottom line, I feel like I’m in a Staples ad: That was easy!

When I finished yesterday I had been pushing buttons in an effort to figure things out. Now it was time to actually download a book.

  • On your Mark: One of the things I discovered, sort of by accident, was the Mobipocket PID for the device. In case you are wondering here is what you do to find it: open any Mobipocket demo book; push the 2nd button on the left; scroll down the table to the Advanced tab; then scroll down to the About tab. Voilà (had to get at least one French word in here)!

  • Get Ready: Connected the USB cord to my laptop, plugged the other end into the device and switched the Cybook on. Before long I was notified that I had new hardware – Cybook Gen 3. Just to check, I pulled up the file manager and it there it was – drive G on my machine. So far so good!

  • Go: Clicked on my handy eBooks About Everything icon, browsed the new releases put two Books -- Never Enough by Joe McGinniss and Telling Secrets by Frederick Buechner-- in my shopping cart and checked out. They showed very quickly on my bookshelf and I was ready to download them into the My eBooks file. Next, I fired up the Mobipocket reader and it found and registered the Cybook device in seconds. After that, it was a simple matter of importing the files into the reader and finally, storing them on the device.

As I started to read, using the big button on the right side of the device to change pages took a little “getting used to.” My habit is to turn the page on the left side or by using a button in the middle of the device. But getting used to this new method didn’t take as long as I would have thought.

I experimented with font size, type family, page layout and lookup mode. I also figured out that once in a book, the center of the big button would take me to the eBook menu so I didn’t have to fumble around with those little buttons on the side.

Over the weekend I will experiment with RSS and eNews feeds and give the device the acid test.

The acid test? Will my Mom be able to use it?

All in all – this has been a good experience and I am a happy customer. Sure there are a few changes and/or improvements I would like to see, but they are relatively minor and do not impact my overall satisfaction. Good job, Bookeen!

Thursday, November 8, 2007

eBook Reader - My Cybook is here!

Yesterday afternoon I got my Cybook . I made a very adult decision to wait until this weekend to actually play with it. Monday is a holiday and I should have some extra time. Right now, I have things to do, emails to answer, blogs to write and meetings to attend.

Mistake 1: I had to at least open the box and plug it in. After all, it does take three hours to charge.

Mistake 2: I picked it up -- you know, just to move it. I knew it was light but I struck with how light 6.3 oz. really is!

Mistake 3: Since it was in my hand, it seem logical to turn it on -- just to see if it really works. I am happy to report that it works.

The system came up quickly and all of the sudden I was in the Library -- thirty six preloaded files. The view was wonderful: clean, crisp and easy to read. Made me remember why eInk is such a big deal even if it isn't backlit.

And that was it. . .

I started playing. First, the big button on the front. It acts as a combine directional navigation and "Enter" key. Pretty miminalistic but effective. I found six small buttons on the sides (4 on the left and 2 on the right) with tiny unreadable (to these old eyes) symbols on them. I am quite intrigued by them especially, since they remain the "mystery" buttons on the device.

The half page quick start guide made a point of telling me that all would be clear if I read the User's guide. Despite my basic notion that anything that requires a manual is badly designed, I was actually willing to give it a whirl. So I scrolled around the Library looking for it.

Found music files, book files and picture files including one entitled "How eInk Works". No user guide! I went back through the titles 3 times, just in case I missed it.

Took a quick detour to email Bookeen asking about the User Guide. Got a very quick response (impressive) telling me that they would be sending it out to me today in eBook form.

Back to the eBook. Figured I would just start pushing the buttons and find out what happens. So this is what I found out:

  • one button takes you to the Library;
  • one button allows you to navigate in a book (start, find page, change layout, change font and add bookmarks);
  • one seems to control music.
  • The other three? Who knows? Guess I will have to wait for the user guide.
The device does not have a touch screen or stylus and I found that I actually miss them. I am in such a habit of poking and sliding around a screen that it felt strange not to be able to. Very disconcerting to me (a creature of habit).

I dipped into all the files on the device. . . pretty cool stuff. The thing that impressed me the most is that the page change is fast and smooth. No waiting, no ghosting and no jumpiness.

So that is my first take. Unfortunately, I really am out of time: email is stacking up, phones are ringing and I am due in a meeting shortly. Obviously, I haven't tried to download a book yet; that is a task for later (maybe that can wait until this weekend). I'll let you know how it goes.

My overall first impression? Positive. . .

To be continued

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Discounted eBooks - November 7, 2007

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Music is a hot topic as we head into the Holiday season and here are two of the best eBooks on the topic; incredibly different and both entirely riveting.

Catch the new Baldacci boook and the brand new eBook edition of Everlasting at a great special price. Finally, The Day I Stopped Being Pretty is one of our most requested titles ever; after reading it, I know why!

Use coupoun code A7BW3 when checking out this week to receive the additional 10% discount. Happy Reading!

Slash eBook edition
Slash, Hudson, Saul, Bozza, Anthony
From one of the greatest rock guitarists of our era comes a memoir that redefines sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll. It is also an intensely personal account of struggle and triumph: as Guns N' Roses journeyed to the top. . . Slash is everything the man, the myth, the legend, inspires: it's funny, honest, inspiring, jaw-dropping . . . and, in a word, excessive.
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List Price : $23.95
Your price $18.43 (Using your 10% discount and $ .97 points1 in eBook Reward points)
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Stone Cold eBook Edition
by: Baldacci, David
Oliver Stone and the Camel Club are back in their most dangerous adventure yet, a war on two fronts. Casino king Jerry Bagger from The Clooectors is hunting Annabelle Conroy who conned him out of millions. Stone and his colleagues Reuben, Milton, and Caleb marshal all their resources to protect Annabelle.
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List Price : $18.99
Your price $14.61 (Using your 10% discount and $ .77 iin eBook Reward points)
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The Day I Stopped Being Pretty eBook edition
by: Lofton, Rodney
This raw and gritty story spans twenty-seven years as Rodney faces racism, homophobia, rape and coping with being HIV positive. It is a story that shows the face of growing up black, living gay and loving positive. . .Triumph over adversity and the ability to find the love we all search for, self love.
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List Price : $9.99
Your price $8.54 (Using your 10% discount and $ .45 in eBook Reward points)
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Everlasting eBook edition
by: Woodiwiss, Kathleen E.
"The first lady of the genre" (historical romance) returns with her most breathtaking masterwork to date-a glorious celebration of a secret love that is dangerous, irresistible, forbidden. . . Abrielle is betrothed to a monster. And the well-being of everyone she cares for demands that she honor her promise.
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List Price : $19.95
Your price $15.35 (Using your 10% discount and $ .81in eBook Reward points)
eBook cover
MUSICOPHILIA
by:Sacks, Oliver
Oliver Sacks’s compassionate, compelling tales of people struggling to adapt to different neurological conditions have fundamentally changed the way we think of our own brains, and of the human experience. In Musicophilia, he examines the powers of music through the individual experiences of patients, musicians, and everyday people—
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List Price : $17.95
Your price $13.82 (Using your 10% discount and $ .73 in eBook Reward points)
Our guarantee: If you have bought one of these titles in the last 15 days we will gladly offer you a coupon for the difference between this price and the price you paid; just contact us.

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Tell us what books to discount Visit this group and make a suggestion . . .we want your comments and suggestions!


Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Net Neutrality - That’s freedom, Baby!

Internet access has always been the ultimate in democracy and freedom of speech and choice. You can use virtually any available application, equipment or service to gain access to almost any content.

Bloggers have access to the same potential audience as the New York Times. Artists of all kinds have equal opportunities to find an audience based on their talent and drive and not on money or privilege. Two students in a dorm room with a good idea, a little ingenuity and some skill can create a multi-billion dollar company. That’s freedom, Baby!

And it gets better since every internet user is pretty much guaranteed access to any site they want, whenever they want it and at the fastest available speed. It doesn’t matter if you log on to Google or eBooks About Everything, the internet access is equal.

There are always those who are suspicious of freedom. People who want to control a good thing – for profit, for morality or just because they think they can. So it is not surprising that big telephone and cable companies (AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, Time Warner) have set their sites on controlling access to the internet and its content.

These (and other) big companies lobby the Federal Government every day for control of internet access, speed and content. In essence they want to transform the freeway model of networking to a toll road version. They will magnanimously allow the government to collect part of the toll if they can control who gets to use the fast lanes.

But some of us are fighting back. A large number of internet pioneers. industry leaders, bloggers and ordinary citizens believe the internet was created provide equal access and that the access should remain equal. We actually believe that the world does not need one more thing controlled by Government and/or Big Business! And because freedom of speech is still allowed a movement call Net Neutrality has sprung up.

Net Neutrality simply means that internet access will always be free, fast and available. That innovation, not money or politics, will determine who succeeds in the market place of ideas and technology.

To find out more, do a simple Google Search on Net Neutrality or a scan of Wikipedia; you will get more information than you can absorb in one sitting.

I love the fact that the internet is open, free and somewhat “wild”. I suppose it is the last vestige of my 60’s rebel persona. And as a former rebel, nothing makes me sit up and notice faster then when the government (or anyone else) wants to start controlling something.

As we move into election season protecting our freedoms has become an increasingly important agenda for me. I have a few action items:
  • I will only vote for candidates who support Net Neutrality.
  • I am stepping up my writing/email campaign to my current representatives to tell them that Net Neutrality is vitally important to economic growth and development
  • I have joined Save the Net and Hands off the Internet
  • I will support these organizations with money and time

One of the things I have learned over the years is the awesome power of fingers on keyboards. Enough of them pointed at a single target can change the world. That is freedom in action!

Monday, November 5, 2007

So many eBooks; so . . . .

I have come to the conclusion that somewhere along the way, I have contracted a rare and bizarre form of narcolepsy. Every time I pick up a book I fall asleep. Wouldn’t be so bad except that my eBook reader is full and my nightstand is overflowing with books, that theoretically, I want to read.

Over the last week I have dipped into all of them, read a few pages and promptly fallen asleep.

For example on my eBook Reader and Palm are the books I have bought because for one reason or another they appeal to me:

On the night stand I have a collection of books that my friends and family have loaned (or in some cases forced on) me because they think I will enjoy them or because they want me to read them for some reason:

  • Life is A Beach by Claire Cook
  • Die, My Love A True Story of Revenge, Murder, and Two Texas Sisters by Kathryn Casey
  • Love at Goon Park: Harry Harolow and the Science of Affection by Deborah Blum
  • Broken: My Story of Addiction and Redemption by William Cope Moyers
  • When the World Was Steady by Claire Messud
  • Anything for Jane by Cheryl Mendelson

What to do?

I have tried an uncomfortable chair, sitting in a crowd at Starbucks and drinking coffee (lots of coffee). Nothing seems to work. But I have a solution to my problem.

It is in the slim volume I have taken to carrying in my purse entitled How to Talk About Books You Haven't Read by Pierre Bayard.

I am sure that this will be a great help to me if I can stay awake long enough to read it.

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Good News for eBooks - Digital Reading is Catching on!

It’s official: Web users are reading less material in print.

According to the USC Annenberg School Center for the Digital Future the number of Internet users who say that they spend less time reading offline printed materials rose from 19.3% in 2001 to 23.2% in 2006.

How about that?! I am sure that this news will have educators, Luddites and other naysayers gloating while newspaper, magazine and book publishers tremble.

The Annenberg School “surveys more than 2,000 individuals across the United States, each year contacting the same households to explore how online technology affects the lives of Internet users and non-users. It also examines how changing technology, such as the shift from Internet access by modem to broadband, affects behavior. “

This year’s portion on the changes in reading concludes with this statement: “A growing number of web users are seeking out that information on-line, frequently from the on-line versions of the same sources. Everything in our work strongly suggests that this trend will increase significantly.”

I see this as generally good news for eBooks. The newest eBooks readers accommodate newspaper and magazine subscriptions along with RSS feeds. Obviously they are banking on this trend as well.

As devices become more wired and sophisticated, consumers are becoming increasingly comfortable with reading almost anything electronic -- their computer, PDA, cell phone or eBook Reader. The “I hate reading on a screen” objection is beginning to fade away. Of course the clarity of the eInk screens doesn’t hurt!

Another interesting finding is that television viewing is actually up slightly. You can’t help but wonder what will happen as more TV programming is available online. Will viewers follow the same path as readers? But I digress.

The point is that reading is not dead or even dying, it is changing. Great news for innovators and very bad news for those who love the status quo.

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