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Ebook
An ebook is an electronic or digital version of
a book. The term is used ambiguously to refer to either an
individual work in a digital format, or a device used to read
books in digital format. The second usage should be deprecated
in favour of the more precise "ebook device".
The term ebook is also often used synonomously
with E-text,
although the latter is really the more general case, and ebook
the more limited.
Formats
The ebook community has available to it a substantial array of
options when it comes to choosing a format for production. While
the average end user might arguably simply want to read books,
every format has its exponents and champions, and debates over
"which format is best" can become intense.
Formats available include, but are by no means limited to:
-
plain
text (also known as ASCII
text),
-
Rich
Text Format (RTF),
-
HTML
(with or without style sheets),
-
SGML
(Standard Generalised Markup Language) (including the TEI
standard),
-
XML,
-
Adobe's
Acrobat PDF
(Portable Document Format),
-
Adobe's
PDF-like eBook format,
-
Microsoft's
Reader
format,
-
Palm
Digital Media's Palm Reader format,
-
Mobipocket
format,
-
TeX,
-
Postscript,
-
and
various image-file formats, including GIF, JPEG and TIFF.
Of these, the main contenders appear to be HTML, ASCII, PDF and
latterly XML. TeX
is too complex for general use, and other formats are directed
more at specialist needs.
To some extent, the choice of format will depend on the aims of
the creator of the document. E-text projects generally fall into
two camps: those concerned with accurate reproduction of
existing paper editions, where it becomes important to preserve
features of the original, such as pagination; and those
concerned with the creation of new, online editions, where such
features are unimportant. (Although it is the opinion of this
author that creators are often unclear as to which camp they
belong.) Examples of the former are MOA and the Oxford Text
Archive. Examples of the latter are Project Gutenberg and eBooks@Adelaide.
For commercial publication, digital
rights management is all important, and tends to override
other considerations in the choice of format. Recent history has
seen players such as Microsoft
and Adobe
enter the market with purpose-built soiftware which addresses
the right management needs of commercial publishers.
Attempts are underway to create a standard format for ebooks,
notably by The
Open eBook Forum (OEBF), based on XML/XHTML.
Devices
People have read ebooks on PDA's
such as the Palm since those devices first appeared, and the
Palm and its imitators remains one of the most popular devices
for reading ebooks.
Various attempts have been made, and continue to be made, to
produce purpose-built devices for reading ebooks. One of the
earliest, and probably the most successful of these was the 'Rocket
eBook', and others include the 'Softbook',
'Hiebook', and 'Franklin eBookman'.
The advantage of such devices lies in their portability and
capacity for holding large numbers of books in memory. But
consumer resistance remains strong, with most readers still
preferring the traditional paperback. One apparently
insurmountable problem with such devices is cost: manufacturers
have seemed unable to produce at a low enough price to make them
attractive to large numbers of readers.
Comparison
with Print Books
Some advantages of ebooks include:
-
Ebooks
take up no space. Hundreds or even thousands may be carried
together on one device. Approximately 500 average ebooks --
equivalent to a room-full of print books, can be stored on
one CD.
-
Ebooks
may be read in low light or even total darkness, with a
back-lit device.
-
Type
size and type face may be easily adjusted to suit the
reader.
-
Ebooks
can be used with text-to-speech software for the blind.
-
Ebooks
can be readily reformatted to suit different devices.
-
Ebooks
may be instantly copied and distributed at very low cost.
-
Many
readers can read the same ebook simultaneously if networked.
-
Ebooks
cannot be burned. Once distributed over the internet,
eliminating an ebook could be very hard indeed.
-
Errors
in an ebook may be easily corrected, whereas once printed,
an error is "forever". (This can also be an
advantage for printed books, in different circumstances.)
On the other hand, print books have some advantages too,
including:
-
A
Paperback is very portable.
-
Books
can be used in adverse environmental conditions.
-
Books
are robust and can still be read when severely damaged.
-
Books
require no power source.
-
An
ebook cannot be thrown across the room in disgust.
Projects
Project
Gutenberg may claim to be the earliest project to create an
archive of ebooks, having started in 1978. Many other projects
have followed, mostly based on public domain texts (often
derived from Project Gutenberg).
While no single directory of available ebooks exists (try Google),
two directories are very useful, indexing around 20,000 texts
between them: The
On-Line Books Page and The
Internet Public Library Online Texts Collection.
Commercial
ventures
Many publishers are reluctant to produce ebooks over fears of piracy
and it wasn't until the 21st
century that many publishers considered it a worthwhile
forum, despite some earlier successes such as the 1988
ebook of William
Gibson's Mona
Lisa Overdrive, and Stephen
King's Riding
the Bullet, which garnered half a million downloads
when it was released on March
14, 2000
(only the first part of the book was free, and King gave up when
he couldn't get enough people to pay for the remaining parts).
The lack of legitimate ebooks led to rapid growth of the number
of unlicensed ebooks being produced, a growth which still
continues - most significantly in the genres of science
fiction and fantasy.
This had resulted in the number of unlicensed ebooks to outweigh
the licensed ebooks by several orders of magnitude.
The popular e-tailers
Amazon.com
and Barnes
and Noble sell ebooks in the two most popular formats,
Microsoft's Reader format and Adobe's eBook format. Citing
profitability concerns, Barnes and Noble stopped selling ebooks
in 2003. Fictionwise
is a popular online ebook store that sells ebooks in a variety
of formats.
Recent attempts to revive ebooks include ExeBook,
an ebook compiler that produces an exe file that, when executed,
produces a simulated book onscreen, complete with page texture.
The etext is encrypted as graphic images so that automatic text
copying is very difficult. The fear of exe files picking up
viruses, however, is hampering acceptance.
References
See also: E-text,
digital
library, Project
Gutenberg
This
content from Wikipedia
is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License.
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