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Public libraries branch out with electronic books

January 31st, 2012 No comments

It’s a stormy winter day. You had planned on visiting your local library to pick up that novel you wanted to read, but having to shovel your driveway and then head out on the road just seems too daunting. You’ll have to wait for another day to get your book.

But thanks to a new Internet-based initiative from Newfoundland and Labrador Public Libraries, you can now stay at home and still have access to some of the library’s collection.

They recently introduced ebooks (short for electronic books) for library members. All people have to do is visit http://elibrary.nlpl.ca and login with an automated library card to download selected titles. Residents can even sign up for a card on the website.

“In some cases with the ebooks, we can order them and they can be available within days,” said Betty Whalen, an assistant manager with Newfoundland and Labrador Public Libraries.

“If we order a real book, it has to come from the publisher and be sent to us, to our headquarters in Stephenville to be catalogued and then sent out to the libraries – it can take a little longer to actually get the physical book out on the shelf than it does an ebook.”

Ms. Whalen said they started offering elibrary (short for electronic library) services in June and there are a wide variety of genres available, including fiction, non-fiction, children’s books and audiobooks.

Titles automatically expire from computers or digital devices at the end of the lending period, so there aren’t any late fees. And as with regular library books, if there’s only one copy available and one person checks out the book, others will have to put a hold on the title and wait for it to become available.

Ms. Whalen said John Grisham’s “The Litigators” and Newfoundland books, such as Kathleen Winters’ “Annabel,” are among most popular with readers thus far, so they are considering ordering more copies of these ebooks to meet the demand.

She also noted seniors seem to be enjoying this new library service.

“It’s neat because you don’t need large print. When you get it on your ereader, you can actually increase the size of the font and we’re actually finding the majority of people coming into us looking for help on how to download items are actually seniors.”

In addition to the website, library members can contact their local library for more information.

 

Article source: http://www.thegeorgian.ca/Entertainment/2012-01-31/article-2881677/Public-libraries-branch-out-with-electronic-books/1

BooksOnBoard Unveils This Week’s Bestselling UK Authors and eBooks

January 31st, 2012 No comments

Sales of numerous ebooks by Sabrina Jeffries have dramatically increased in the UK this week following the release of A Lady Never Surrenders, the fifth and final addition to the Hellions of Halstead Hall series.

“This is a series that blurs genre lines with remarkable grace” said Leigh Carver, BooksOnBoard’s Marketing Manager. “Not only a historical romance, the Hellions of Halstead Hall is a complex family saga with several mysterious deaths at its heart. This is a mystery series, complete with a covert government operative and a member of London’s first professional police force, the Bow Street Runners, to help the five Sharpe siblings uncover the truth of their own past. It is a series with a large following among BooksOnBoard customers, particularly in the UK”

A Lady Never Surrenders is joined on BooksOnBoard’s bestsellers list by both the third ebook in the Hellions of Halstead Hall series, How to Woo a Reluctant Lady, and the fourth, To Wed a Wild Lord.

1. Believing the Lie — Elizabeth George
2. No One Left to Tell — Karen Rose
3. Private Games — James Patterson
4. The Graveyard Shift — Jack Higgins
5. The Chalk Girl — Carol O’Connell
6. Gun Games — Faye Kellerman
7. Nightmare — Stephen Leather
8. Heir of Novron — Michael J. Sullivan
9. 11.22.63 — Stephen King
10. Private — James Patterson

Bestselling Romance eBooks
1. A Lady Never Surrenders — Sabrina Jeffries
2. How the Marquess Was Won — Julie Anne Long
3. Whispers in the Dark — Maya Banks
4. To Wed a Wild Lord — Sabrina Jeffries
5. Unraveling Midnight — Stephanie Beck
6. Copper Beach — Jayne Ann Krentz
7. How to Woo a Reluctant Lady — Sabrina Jeffries
8. Spirit Bound — Christine Feehan
9. Wild Cat — Jennifer Ashley
10. The Duke is Mine — Eloisa James

Bestselling Authors
1. James Patterson
2. Jack Higgins
3. Elizabeth George
4. Faye Kellerman
5. Stephen King

Bestselling Romance Authors
1. Sabrina Jeffries
2. Maya Banks
3. Christine Feehan
4. Julie Anne Long
5. Stephanie Beck

BooksOnBoard
is the largest independent online retailer of eBooks, with an inventory of approximately 500,000 unique titles. BooksOnBoard is also one of the largest retailers of downloadable Audio Books, and carries formats compatible with eBook Readers such as: Android devices, Apple iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, Sony PRS-300 eBook Readers, Cybook Opus Pocket eBook Readers, Cybook Gen3 eBook Readers, and Astak EZReader Pocket Pro eBook Readers.

Related Links The largest independent retailer of ebooks and audio books Bestselling ebooks and audio books For the latest deals, follow us on Twitter

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  ebook ebooks audio book audio books Kindle Fire Contact Information Nathan Johnson Director of Operations BooksOnBoard info@booksonboard.com

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Article source: http://www.webwire.com/ViewPressRel.asp?aId=152146

5 Things You Need to Know Today: Jan. 31

January 31st, 2012 No comments

1. The American Red Cross is holding a blood drive at All Saints Episcopal Church at the corner of Common and Clark streets between 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. They are especially seeking Type O negative donors. There will be Dunkin’ Donuts treats for those giving today. 

2. You just got an eReader for yourself or as a present over the holidays and are happily using it. Did you know that you can borrow books form the library with your reader? For all you with an eReader or other portable device, join Technology Librarian, Emily Smith at 7:30 p.m. in the Belmont Public Library for “OverDrive Simplified,” a hands-on workshop on downloading free eBooks. Smith, will shows how to download ebooks to your eReader for free using the library’s OverDrive Digital Media Catalog.

Bring your device and USB cord, a laptop (if you have one), your Amazon login (for Kindles) or Adobe Digital Editions login (if you have one) and your library card number and PIN. Space is limited. Registration is required so call 617-993-2870 or click the signup button or hand icon to register online. 

3. Pre-school Story Time returns to the Benton Library, Belmont’s only independent, volunteer-run library, at a new time of 10:30 a.m. Today’s theme is winter. This popular 45-minute program is geared to children ages 3, 4 and 5. Parents and caregivers must be present during the program. Sign up is not required.

4. Story times for children ages 2 and 3, in which songs and movement are part of the story time experience, will take place for early risers at 9:30 a.m. to 10 a.m. and then again from 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. Held across the hallway from the Children’s Room in the Flett Room of the Belmont Public Library. For children aged four to five, Story craft for 4′s and 5′s will begin with a story followed by a simple craft. The storytelling will take place in the Flett Room across from the Children’s Room from 3:15 p.m. to 3:45 p.m.

5. Drop-in yoga classes, taught by professional instructors in the Vinyasa style – flowing with the breath – will be held in Gardner Hall (enter via Alexander Street) of the Plymouth Congregational Church, 582 Pleasant St., beginning at 9:15 a.m. All levels welcome. Bring your own mat. Childcare is available for $6 per child with a $12 family maximum. There is also free parking on Pleasant and Leonard streets and behind Macy’s. All proceeds benefit the Plymouth Nursery School.a

Article source: http://belmont.patch.com/articles/5-things-you-need-to-know-today-jan-31-d03c389d

More workshops

January 31st, 2012 No comments

Pole Position Marketing Releases New eBook on Link Building

January 31st, 2012 No comments


Link building tips and tricks from 10 of today’s industry-leading link builders. Download free e-book now!

(EMAILWIRE.COM, January 30, 2012 ) Canton, Ohio – Pole Position Marketing recently published its latest Web marketing e-book, the revised 2012 edition of Link Building Secrets Revealed. Available for download at no cost on the Pole Position Marketing website, the e-book is a compilation of helpful link-building tips from 10 of the industry’s leading link builders.

Annalisa Hilliard, Pole Position Marketing’s link-building strategist, says the book contains excellent ideas for both beginner and advanced link builders.

“When I first started with Internet marketing, I came across many articles that talked about how important link building is,” she says. “But, I could not find a guide that explained the best way to go about it. This new e-book will certainly make it easier for others who want to deepen their understanding of link building.”

Contributors to the e-book include Jim Boykin of Internet Marketing Ninjas, Peter da Vanzo of GoFish Media Ltd., Michele Baldoni of MBWeb, Peter van der Graaf of SearchSpecialist.nl, Eric Ward of EricWard.com, John Doherty of Distilled, Jason Acidre of KaiserTheSage.com, Garrett French of Citation Labs, Melanie Nathan of CanadianSEO and Arnie Kuenn of Vertical Measures.

The new link-building resource is one of several e-books offered by Pole Position Marketing, which include The Best Damn Web Marketing Checklist, Keyword Research and Selection and Destination Search Engine Marketing – all authored by CEO Stoney deGeyter.

He says, “I really appreciate how much great information my colleagues provided for this e-book. I’m confident that anyone who downloads it will learn a lot from their experience.”

Link Building Secrets Revealed 2012 is available in Pole Position Marketing’s online learning library.

About Pole Position Marketing

Pole Position Marketing is a Web marketing agency based in Canton, Ohio, that provides SEO, PPC, Web analytics, social media, content marketing and link-building strategy services. Since 1998, the company has been striving to help clients engage customers, drive their brand and win online conversions.

Press Release Courtesy of Online PR Media: http://bit.ly/wsJd2n

Article source: http://www.emailwire.com/release/80698-Pole-Position-Marketing-Releases-New-eBook-on-Link-Building.html

Murder In Store’ Is Free eBook Today

January 31st, 2012 No comments

Murder In Store by DC Brod is today’s Free eBook of the Day.

The detective novel takes place in a department store. Here is more from the book’s description: “Preston Hauser, owner of a famous department store, asks his head of security, Quint McCauley, to investigate some threatening letters he has received. No sooner does Quint take on the job, than Preston is poisoned by one of his own vitamin pills. With Quint looking on. Suspicion falls on Hauser’s young wife, Diana, but Quint quickly learns she’s not the only one who might benefit from the millionaire’s death.”

Amazon and Barnes Noble have the free download through February 4th.

For more free eBooks, check out our Free eBook of the Day archive.

Article source: http://www.mediabistro.com/ebooknewser/murder-in-store-is-free-ebook-today_b19786

Digital Bookmobile Makes Santa Monica Stop

January 31st, 2012 No comments

By Lookout Staff

January 31, 2012 — Avid readers who have yet to jump on the eBook
bandwagon can literally do so next month when the OverDrive Digital Bookmobile
makes a stop in Santa Monica.

The stop at the Main Santa Monica Public Library February 10 is part
of the Bookmobile’s national tour to teach visitors of all ages how to
download the Library’s free eBook and eAudiobook collections and
to experience the ease and convenience of eReading, library officials
said.

“E-Books are the top growth sector in today’s publishing
industry,” said City Librarian Greg Mullen. “Enthusiasm for
e-books is high on the part of Santa Monica Public Library customers.”

The 74-foot Digital Bookmobile tractor trailer is specially equipped
and features a Welcome and Orientation area, a high-definition instructional
Video Lounge, an Audiobook Alley, the eBook Experience and a Gadget Gallery
of Internet-connected portable devices that are compatible with the Library’s
newest download service.

Interactive demonstrations will be provided by representatives from OverDrive®,
Inc. and Library staff to help users with the service. Visitors to the
Digital Bookmobile can sample the Library’s growing collection of
bestselling, new release, and classic eBook and eAudiobook titles.

Santa Monica Public Library card holders can check out and download digital
titles anytime, anywhere by visiting http://ebook.smpl.org.

“Once downloaded, digital titles can be enjoyed on a computer or
transferred to supported mobile devices,” library officials said.
“Many audio titles can also be burned to audio CD.

“At the end of the lending period, titles will automatically expire
and are returned to the digital collection,” library officials said.
“There are never late fees or damaged items.”

The Bookmobile will be stationed in the Library’s North lot between 10
a.m. and 4 p.m.

The Santa Monica Public Library is wheelchair accessible. For special
disabled services, call Library Administration at (310) 458-8606 at least
one week prior to event. The Main Library is served by Big Blue Bus and
bicycle racks are available.

The Digital Bookmobile Expo is co-sponsored by the Friends of the Santa
Monica Public Library. For more information, the public can call the Santa
Monica Public Library at (310) 458-8600; or visit the Library’s
web site at www.smpl.org.

Article source: http://www.surfsantamonica.com/ssm_site/the_lookout/news/News-2012/January-2012/01_31_2012_Digital_%20Bookmobile_Makes_%20Santa_%20Monica_%20Stop%20.html

Eurofield Information Solutions Announces Availability of the ICD-10-AM/ACHI/ACS Seventh Edition eBook on HealthGenius.com.au

January 31st, 2012 No comments

Eurofield Information Solutions (EIS) announced today that the ICD-10-AM/ACHI/ACS Seventh Edition eBook is available again from its NEW HealthGenius.com.au website, and is better than ever.

“After some eighteen months of persistent effort we have been able to negotiate an agreement with the Department of Health and Ageing for the rights to the ICD-10-AM/ACHI/ACS Sixth and Seventh Editions. Now Clinical Coders can purchase or update the Seventh Edition for FAST download, to install on a single PC or network with the latest errata and QA fully consolidated” Alfred Papallo said.

EIS utilised its Award Winning eComPress software, and together with the University of Sydney NCCH developed ICD-10-AM/ACHI/ACS eBook, and NCCH licensed it and successfully marketed it to hospitals and Clinical Coders for more than ten years. The ICD-10-AM/ACHI/ACS eBook was specifically designed for Clinical Coders to enable them to code accurately and efficiently, and make their job easier.

And Alfred Papallo said “The ICD-10-AM/ACHI/ACS eBook is better than ever, and we are very proud to make it available again”.

EIS invested years of work in developing eComPress and the ICD-10-AM/ACHI/ACS eBook to make it extremely FAST and easy to search, annotate and share information. The NEW version includes a number of enhancements including the ability to easily search the Notes annotations, expand and contract the tree Table of Contents and be automatically updated when new errata are made available.

Many Clinical Coders around Australia have been requesting the ICD-10-AM/ACHI/ACS eBook be made available again and until 10th of February, it’s extremely good value. For ONLY $115, existing Seventh Edition subscribers can receive an automatically updated and enhanced version with all the errata consolidated. That’s more than a 30% discount off the latest enhanced Seventh Edition eBook price.

Buy the enhanced up-to-date ICD-10-AM/ACHI/ACS eBook for immediate download or CD-ROM NOW from HealthGenius.com.au/.

The normal price for existing ICD-10-AM/ACHI/ACS 7th Edition eBook subscribers is $165, and for new subscribers it is only $330 including updates. Network versions are $380 for the first user, and $265 for the second and subsequent users including updates. Student and Site Licences pricing is available on request.

So become a HealthGenius and take advantage of this powerful productivity tool for your clinical coding requirements.

Article source: http://www.newswiretoday.com/news/104976/Eurofield_Information_Solutions_Announces_Availability_of_the_ICD10AMandACHIandACS_Seventh_Edition_eBook_on_HealthGenius.com.au/

Living Faith’ eBook Now Available

January 31st, 2012 No comments

CHICAGO, IL (January 30, 2012) – A digital version of Living Faith: Reflections on Covenant Affirmations is now available through CovBooks.com, the official online bookstore of the Evangelical Covenant Church, it was announced today.

The new digital book is available for purchase and download in two basic formats, one suitable for all Amazon Kindle devices and one suitable for downloading for iPhone, iPad and all NOOK devices.

“The Covenant affirmations bring the vibrant faith tenets of the Evangelical Covenant Church into written focus,” the online description reads. “They form the nucleus of beliefs that shape the Covenant’s theology. Neither a creed nor a confession in the historical sense, they represent long-held theological and biblical views that express living faith in a living God. They continually address believers, asking us to be intentional in how we use our heads, hearts, and hands in the work of Christ.”

In this volume, the faculty of North Park Theological Seminary engage and interact with the six affirmations in fresh, new ways. “Their discussions and insights reveal some of the joys, challenges, difficulties, and blessings that the affirmations elicit.”

This is the first Covenant book to be offered in a digital format, notes Don Meyer, executive minister of the Department of Communication. Plans call for additional offerings, including re-introduction of volumes from past years that are no longer in print.

Click here to purchase the digital version of the book online, or visit Covenant Bookstore at CovBooks.com and search for the book title. The normal retail price for the print edition of the book has been discounted by 20 percent during this special introductory period. Download instructions are provided as part of the purchase process.

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Article source: http://www.covchurch.org/news/2012/01/30/%E2%80%98living-faith%E2%80%99-ebook-now-available/

Jonathan Franzen Is Wrong: Ebooks Are Good for Everyone

January 31st, 2012 No comments

I love books, especially old ones. Recently I learned a simple dinner table trick from a 110-year-old magic book. It involves picking up a napkin with both hands and, without releasing either corner, tying the napkin into a knot. Good fun and likely unavailable anywhere but in this very old tome. That fact, though, does not make me love ebooks any less or think that they somehow are a better long-term solution for the reading public. Celebrated author Jonathan Franzen thinks otherwise.

Author of The Corrections and Freedom, Franzen is revered for his prose, attention to detail and ear for the inner lives of sometimes desperate (and or depressed) people. I think his writing is excellent, but he is way off base on ebooks.

[More from Mashable: What Apple Could Do With Its $100 Billion Cash Hoard [COMIC]]

In a speech given during Britain’s Hay Festival in Cartagena, Columbia, Franzen said he prefers paper technology. “I can spill water on it and it would still work!” said Franzen, according to a report in The Telegraph. Franzen was also fixated on the idea that ebooks can or will change over time. Print is permanent and Franzen apparently prizes that permanence. For the record, Franzen’s books are available as ebooks.

I have no idea why Franzen assumes that publishers and authors are changing their books for the e-editions. With the exception of no longer knowing exact page numbers, I don’t see anyone changing their books for the Amazon Kindle, Kindle Fire, Barnes Noble Nook, or the Apple iPad and iBooks. An ebook reader is just a new delivery mechanism for literature.

[More from Mashable: Happy 2nd Birthday, iPad. What Will This Toddler Be When it Grows up?]

To make matters worse, Franzen throws “capitalists” into the mix. They hate print books, he said, because these physical books will continue to work 10 years from now. “It’s a bad business model,” noted Franzen. I think capitalists like any kind of book they can sell you in mass quantities. I don’t think they love ebooks more because they won’t last as long (or at least the platforms they’re on won’t). My guess is that capitalists appreciate the speed with which you can get an ebook to market and the enhanced opportunities for broad distribution. Think about it: Millions of Steve Jobs bio books (one of ebook’s top three sellers in 2011) were delivered to readers, and I bet a vast portion of them did not ride on trucks. They sped through the air from, say, Amazon’s servers to millions of Kindles around the world.

If Franzen is interested in permanence, shouldn’t he cheer the fact that people are now reading books, but not hacking down the world’s trees to make them or sending carbon-monoxide-producing global warming-promoting 18-wheelers around the county to deliver thousands and thousands of physical books (though, to be fair, this is still happening, too)?

No, Franzen is fixated on the idea of physical books. I partially agree with him: Printed books are a powerful, romantic idea. As noted, I love them and have a rather large collection of both large format books and many from the late 1800s and early 1900s. It’s not unusual for me to pull one of the shelf and start thumbing through it, just to look at the old engravings or marvel at the notes scribbled near the binding by, perhaps, the first owner. That romantic ideal, however, doesn’t make me want to read stop reading ebooks on my Kindle, iPad or iPhone.

Oddly, my own 13-year-old daughter is a little like Franzen. She has never read an ebook. I blame J.K. Rowling. Until recently, the author refused to offer the Harry Potter series as ebooks. So my daughter’s only choice has been to lug around each increasingly larger volume in the series. She’s on the final tome now and it is a monster. Yet, she insists she never wants to own a Kindle. She says she simply loves books too much and cannot imagine a time when they’re gone.

I hate to tell her this, but ebooks are the future. They’re cheaper to produce, easier to distribute and, dare I say it, probably promote reading better than your local library. And while Franzen is concerned about ebook versions differing from their real-world counterparts, I’m cheering the emergence of new kinds of ebooks that take the IRL reading experiences to places we scarcely imagined on the printed page. One need only look to interactive children’s books and etextbooks for evidence.

What Franzen fails to realize is that while books are beautiful, permanent things they’re also inconvenient. Years ago you traveled with, maybe, one book and some magazines. You wouldn’t consider taking two big books (maybe two thinner paperbacks). But even if you weren’t traveling, when you finished one book, you needed to head to the library or bookstore to buy another. When I finish an ebook, I simply connect to Kindle’s Whispernet and buy and download a new one. Like most people I know, I read more now with my Kindle than I ever did before.

My reaction to Franzen’s comment was immediate and negative. Not surprisingly, when I posted news of Franzen’s comments on Google+, the tech-savvy audience echoed much of my own sentiments. They derided Franzen for appointing himself “guardian of society” and noted how Franzen’s concerns are not unlike those who feared what the rise of the Guttenberg press would do to publishing.

I will not lie and say that I won’t miss print when it’s gone, but, as Franzen himself predicts, it will be a memory in 50 years. Franzen’s glad he won’t be here to see it. I, on the other hand, hope to live well past my 97th year and to thoroughly enjoy ebooks from now to then and beyond. Maybe Franzen will change his mind and join me.

Do you decry the rise of ebooks and inevitable fall of print? Share your worries (or lack thereof) in the comments.


Bonus: Up Close with the Barnes Noble Nook Tablet


Barnes Noble‘s Nook Demo

A look at some of the games and apps available on the Nook Tablet. By the holidays, Barnes Noble will offer thousands of high-quality Nook Apps from leading third-party developers and content providers that can be enjoyed on Nook Tablet, as well as Nook Color.

Click here to view this gallery.

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Article source: http://news.yahoo.com/jonathan-franzen-wrong-ebooks-good-everyone-145815056.html

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