Archives for posts with tag: BookGlutton

We’ve now added a short video introduction inside our books. You can find it in our default widget, a little something we like to call “Book 0.” As you can see above, we’re pulling it directly from youtube.

Most likely you’ll use Book 0 if you want to embed the widget but can’t decide which book you’d like to put on your site. It’s easy to go to our API page and grab the embed code for Book 0. Then you’ll be displaying the widget with instructions, and people can switch to any other book in the catalog using the catalog button at the bottom of the Reader. For those of you who’ve tried to grab the widget from the API page before now: our apologies for any errors you ran in to. It’s all good now.

We think video is going to become a popular element, and pulling the stuff in dynamically means it can be updated when needed. I should point out that video is not a core media type of ePub. This means we’re technically supposed to supply a fallback image; we don’t currently supply fallback elements, but we will in the future.

Try it: open Book 0.

We’ve finally gotten around to this much-needed and much-requested feature. Now everything you upload privately to your BookGlutton library is available in the Stanza online catalog. We still have some polishing to do on the user interface front for this feature, so excuse the bumpy ride for now, but some improvements are on the way, along with additional personalized features like Shares, Reading History and Notes.

It’s pretty simple. You’ll just need to log in and then refresh the cattalog.Here’s how:

  • In the Stanza “Library” view, select “Online Catalog”, then select the “Books From BookGlutton” feed, then “My Uploads”
  • Log in with your BG credentials. When the page refreshes to the homepage, you’ve done it successfully. Before you can access your feed though, you’ll need to refresh the catalog.
  • To refresh the catalog, usie the back link at the top of the screen, go back as far as you can, to the “Library” view again. It’s important you go ALL THE WAY BACK! Otherwise, you won’t get a catalog refresh.
  • Repeat the initial steps. The catalog should refresh, and now when you select “My Uploads” … voila!

Sometimes we write features because WE want to use them…not in the name of business, but because we think it will be cool. We think that it will make things BETTER. Thus we’re announcing BookGlutton Keyboard navigation. Unofficially we’ve had it live for some time for our own use; some of you may have come across it. Just to make sure we’re all on the same page here are the details.

Depending on which browser you use one or all of these will work. Navigate back and forth through the books using PAGE UP / PAGE DOWN on your keyboard. You can also use the UP and DOWN ARROW keys. Oh yeah, and SPACE BAR will drive you to the next page, too. The Reader buttons will miss you. Gaming keyboards have long been creating such shortcuts for the gamer community, it’s about time the normal users like us get some attention.

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UPDATE

We’ve disabled these controls for some browsers – we were getting some funky issues with the annotations. It’ll be back shortly; we’ll update here and our Twitter feed: http://www.twitter.com/bookgluttonNEWs.

It takes about seven minutes into any conversation with a publisher before the DRM issue comes up. We’ve counted. And we get it – protecting content is important and we don’t take it lightly. But the web is different. It has evolved its own set of controls. To that end we’ve written up a short document on how BookGlutton approaches content protection. Here are a few hightlights. Download the PDF or, even better, Read and comment on Bookglutton.

EXCERPT:

We are headed quickly into a future where almost all intellectual commodities get distributed through the web. Instead of fearing this, we need to face the reality that the web is the one network that empowers people to find exactly what they’re looking for, and enjoy it with others. That’s something people are willing to pay for. The “long tail” of publishing will be on the Web.

The nature of sharing on BookGlutton’s service is linking, not copying. On the web, consumers would much rather have links than files. They would also much rather share a clipping or snippet of text than an entire book. That said, the illegal copying and redistribution of text is still a concern for publishers and authors. Steps taken to address this concern usually involve some combination of the following measures:

  1. Dynamically generating the HTML to display pages, so “viewing source” doesn’t reveal it.
  2. Chunking files into smaller segments to prevent outright copying of an entire file
  3. Chunking text to prevent outright copying of long passages
  4. Disabling right-click mouse actions or key presses such as CTRL-C
  5. Disabling the ability to select text
  6. Using Flash or some other plugin to protect text when it’s displayed in the browser
  7. Creating images of each page

BookGlutton uses  some, but not all of these approaches.

An important point to remember: encrypting files protects them “in the wild,” but it does very little when they are already in a highly secure web system. Using Adobe’s form of EPUB encryption, for example, in a web system would require decrypting book content before sending it to the browser, which would defeat the purpose of the encryption. Besides, the web already offers strong encryption for securing that content in its path from server to browser, and it’s the same encryption used to transmit passwords and credit card numbers: SSL.

New criteria are needed for evaluating the risks of web-based services. Instead of vetting a service based on whether it licenses and uses a particular form of file encryption or DRM, it’s far better to require the following:

  1. Users identify themselves before purchasing, sharing or consuming content
  2. Content is chunked, and the entire file is never available to the consumer
  3. The platform is based on linking, not copying
  4. The service and the content are tied together, so that one without the other represents a significant drop in value for the consumer
  5. The service’s network architecture meets the same stringent requirements for the storing of credit card data and other sensitive information…

Download the full 3 page PDF

Even better: Read on Bookglutton

Our own Travis Alber, co-founder of BookGlutton.com, had a chance to talk to Kat Meyer for her series The Digitizers. She adds her two cents on the ebook market, digital book design, the epub format and BookGlutton’s plans for the future. Check it out on Teleread!

BookGlutton has partnered with WordClay, a division of AuthorSolutions. Now BookGlutton writers who want a paper copy of their uploads can click through to the WordClay site and put a print version together. It’s a nice way to round out some of the workshop feedback you might get in your BookGlutton Group!

Although at BookGlutton we’re all about the digital experience, sometimes people want paper, and we get that. WordClay will help you print your stuff out, sell the paper version through their site, and give you all kinds of help along the way.

Check out our cool-looking WordClay partner page.

This year has been good to BookGlutton. We launched eleven months ago and enjoyed steady growth. We’ve created partnerships, like the one with Stanza. We’ve had the honor of being a Webby Finalist and won a W3 Award. We released the first online HTML to EPUB Converter – the first of our APIs. We’ve worked hard to enhance the Reader, the Community, and the Catalog. We’ve nursed a Facebook presence and gotten some really great feedback.

All this is rewarding, but what’s really getting us to crack a smile around here is the 88,000 PEOPLE WHO CAME TO BOOKGLUTTON THIS MONTH. Thanks for using BookGlutton, generous Readers. We have some big plans and some significant pushes planned for early 2009, so stay tuned.

Cool! BookGlutton won a W3 Award for Community! Here’s the skinny:

BookGlutton has received a Silver in the 2008 W3 Awards, distributed by the International Academy of the Visual Arts. Receiving over 3,000 entries, the W3 Awards honor outstanding websites, web marketing, and web video created by some of the best interactive agencies, designers, and entrepreneurs worldwide. BookGlutton.com won a Silver Award in the Community category.

“We were amazed at the caliber and quality of work received this year. Our winners continue to push the envelope of internet creativity and web design, and it is gratifying to see such great work from the smallest agencies to the biggest firms” said Linda Day, the director of the IAVA. “On behalf of the International Academy of the Visual Arts, we are honored to recognize our winners as they continue to set a high standard of excellence for Web development.”

You can read the full press release here. Thanks, community!