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An E-book Primer for English Instructors What are e-books? How can I read e-books? How can I create e-books? What should I consider when using e-books for English instruction? Prepared by Catherine Roop For English 513, Spring 2010
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What are e-books? Books that exist in an electronic format rather than on the printed page In general, can be read on computers, dedicated e-book readers, and some phones Sometimes are limited to specific devices
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How do e-books differ from print books? Exist only as files; can be downloaded, stored on a hard drive, and deleted Can sometimes be copied and moved easily, but can sometimes only be used on a single device without the ability to lend or resell Can become corrupted or lost
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How can I read an e-book? Some formats can be read on a computer, phone, or any e-book reader Some formats can only be read on specific e- book readers
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Some devices on which e-books can be read
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How do e-book readers work? E-book readers use a technology called E Ink that looks like ink on a page E-book readers differ from standard computers and phones, whose screens emit light, can cause eye strain, and are difficult to read in bright light
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The Sony Reader Daily Edition uses E Ink technology
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How do I get an e-book? E-books can be downloaded from a number of sites online: – Project Gutenberg – Fictionwise – Sites for specific e-book readers, like the Amazon Kindle page and the Sony Reader store Some e-book readers let you download directly into the device, while others require you to download first onto a computer and then transfer to the device
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How do I read an e-book? Some e-books can be read on almost any computer, e-book reader, or phone (particularly.txt and.pdf files) Some e-books can only be read on a specific e- book reader (for instance,.azw files only work on the Amazon Kindle;.epub files bought in the Sony Reader store can only be read on Sony Readers)
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Various e-book readers and preferred formats E-book readerStore sellsCan also read Amazon Kindle 2 and Kindle DX.azw.mobi.prc.pdf.txt Sony Reader Daily Edition.epub.doc.pdf.rtf.txt Barnes and Noble Nook.epub.pdb.pdf Apple iPad.epub Amazon Kindle formats via Kindle Application
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The Apple iPad is not a dedicated e-book reader, but it is often used to read e-books
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The Barnes and Noble Nook
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How can I create an e-book? Some file formats can be used as e-books without special processing (.txt and sometimes.doc) To preserve formatting, saving a document as a.pdf will allow it be read on most major e- book readers
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What are some benefits of e- books? Title availability (even for out-of-print and limited-audience books) Cost (generally cheaper than print books) Portability (can carry thousands of books on a single device)
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What are some drawbacks to e-books? Incompatibility (some e-books will only work in particular devices) Copy protection (often e-books can’t be lent or resold) Layout and formatting (change when a book is ported into an e-book format)
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Products mentioned E-book readerFor more information Amazon Kindle 2 and Kindle DX www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0015T963C/ ref=sv_kinh_0 Sony Reader Daily Edition ebookstore.sony.com/reader Apple iPad www.apple.com/ipad Barnes and Noble Nook www.barnesandnoble.com/nook
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Image Credits E-book readerFor more information Amazon Kindle www.markstechnologynews.com Collection of E-book readers www.ebookreadersreview.co.uk Sony Reader Daily Edition review.techworld.com Apple iPad www.devicemag.com Barnes and Noble Nook cdn.cbsi.com.au
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