I don't think Kindle is the device of choice. "In September, iPhone
books (some running on Kindle for iPhone (
http://www.pcworld.com/reviews/product/54917/review/kindle_for_iphone.html?tk=rel_news
)) overtook games for the first time, while one in every five new apps
in the App Store in October were books". ... The analytics firm [Flurry]
predicts that Apple could steal market share from Amazon's Kindle, as
more publishers release new book apps for the iPhone at "record rates."
 
http://www.pcworld.com/article/181142/iphone_as_an_ebook_reader_threatens_kindle_says_report.html

-nik

>>> Lesley Ellen Harris <lesleyeharris at comcast.net> 11/5/2009 1:46 PM
>>>
I live within driving distance and went to the discussion.  It was in 

a relatively small boardroom in the basement of the McKeldin Library  
and I got there at 12:30 and there was standing room only....I could  
only guess it was a diverse crowd of students, professors and others  
like me from looking around at the ages and listening to the  
discussions.  I enjoyed listening to the speakers.

What did I learn?  It was definitely helpful if you were in the market 

to buy an e-book reader -- kindle seems to be the choice.  It was also 

helpful to hear the various factors to consider when purchasing an e- 
reader.

Would I buy one after hearing the speakers?  Maybe....And would I buy 

one after being able to read and touch various models?  Probably  
not...for the most part, the readers are big and heavy and if I'm  
travelling with a laptop and iphone....I would probably rather take a 

couple of print books with me!  (I occasionally read e-books on my  
iphone using the B&N free software.)

Only a few minutes were spent at the end talking about writing e-books 

-- I'd love to hear more on that topic at a future session.

Lesley

Lesley Ellen Harris
lesley at copyrightlaws.com 
www.copyrightanswers.blogspot.com 



On Nov 5, 2009, at 1:53 PM, Amalyah Keshet [akeshet at imj.org.il] wrote:

Podcast available at:
http://mith.umd.edu/programs/digitaldialogue/mp3/dd_2009_11_03.mp3 


________________________________________
?????: ??mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu]  
??? Amalyah Keshet  [akeshet at imj.org.il] 
??????: ????? ????? 29 ??????? 2009 08:07
????: 'Museum Computer Network Listserv'
??????: [MCN-L] FW:  11/3 at U. Maryland: "The Great Ebook  
Throwdown"

For anyone within range of University of Maryland, College Park, who  
wants to warm up for our MCN 2009 session in Portland, "More for  
Less:the e-Book Revolution and Mobile Evolution".:
[Nov. 14 at 10:45. Don't miss it. ]

---------------------------

A MITH Digital Dialogue
Tuesday, November 3, 12:30-1:45
MITH Conference Room, Mckeldin Library B0135

?The Great Ebook Throwdown? with Ben Bederson, Nick Chen, and Matt  
Kirschenbaum

Ebooks are suddenly everywhere again. Kindle, Nook, iPhone, Android .
. . after 2000 years, the codex is getting an upgrade. But what kind  
of electronic books and electronic reading devices do we really want?
This roundtable discussion led by Ben Bederson, Nick Chen, and Matt  
Kirschenbaum will feature as many electronic reading and electronic  
book devices as we can lay our hands on, including some prototypes  
being developed here at the University of Maryland. We'll hold them  
up, pass them around, turn them on, talk some trash, and, in the  
process, maybe gain just a little bit of insight into what we all want 

from our electronic book readers. Attendees are encouraged to bring  
along electronic book and reading devices of their own.

Benjamin B. Bederson is an Associate Professor of Computer Science and 

the previous director of the Human-Computer Interaction Lab at the  
Institute for Advanced Computer Studies and iSchool at the University 

of Maryland. His research is on mobile device interfaces, information 

visualization, interaction strategies, digital libraries, and  
accessibility issues such as voting system usability.   He is also co-

founder and Chief Scientist of Zumobi, a startup offering a mobile  
content platform based on that research.

Nicholas Chen is a doctoral candidate in the department of Computer  
Science at the University of Maryland and is affiliated with the Human 

Computer Interaction Lab (HCIL) at UMD. He is advised by Professor  
Francois Guimbretiere in the Cornell University Information Science  
Department. His research is on electronic reading devices, pen-based  
user interfaces, and interactions for supporting simultaneous use of  
multiple devices. Previously, he performed the first-ever evaluation  
of a dual-display electronic reading device.

Matthew G. Kirschenbaum is Associate Professor in the Department of  
English at the University of Maryland, Associate Director of the  
Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities (MITH), and  
Director of Digital Cultures and Creativity, a new ?living/ 
learning? program in the Honors College.

--
Matthew Kirschenbaum
Associate Professor of English
Associate Director, Maryland Institute for Technology in the  
Humanities (MITH) Director, Digital Cultures and Creativity (DCC, a  
new Living/Learning Program in the Honors College) University of  
Maryland
301-405-8505 or 301-314-7111 (fax)
http://mkirschenbaum.net 





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