I am impressed,

I love the ability to touch highlight text on my desktop/mobile. The brand  
*immatériel 
works well in english as well. *

*I am looking to publish manuals and other items in tiddlywiki, I do hope 
you share some of your "simplification" or lockout configuration to the 
community. *

Thanks for sharing, Once launched I think we can all help promote this.

Regards
Tony


On Wednesday, March 11, 2020 at 4:19:11 AM UTC+11, Xavier wrote:
>
> Hi everyone,
>
> TL;DR: Go to 
> https://www.7switch.com/fr/ebook/9783962558772/great-expectations-serapis-classics,
>  
> click on "Read an extract" and play with it. Then come back if you'd like 
> to know more.
>
> I have been working in the publishing industry for the past 25 years, 
> including the last 10 years as the co-founder of a French ebook 
> distribution company, *immatériel.fr 
> <http://www.google.com/url?q=http%3A%2F%2Fxn--immatriel-f4a.fr&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AFQjCNG7S3fYlWUZYxqSXMuXaPapRd2Hiw>*.
>  
> Among many things that got me frustrated in the course of selling ebooks is 
> the fact that ebook formats have never been in phase with how we have 
> linked ourselves to knowledge in the two last decades.
>
> The main reason for this particular failure is because ePub and Mobipocket 
> were initially (around 2010) imposed to publishers by Apple and Amazon 
> respectively, and became soon the only digital formats that publishers 
> could sell to the main vendors (actually, Google Play Books also sells PDF 
> books). 
>
> While there are other reasons to rant about the current state of the ebook 
> market, I gave some thought about what could be a likeable modern format 
> for eBooks, and as you guessed, TiddlyWiki checked all the boxes:
>
>    1. the book should be easy to open: the reading app could be the same 
>    browser that you used to buy the book, whether you are on your mobile or 
> at 
>    your desktop;
>    2. it should be readable both offline or online;
>    3. it should open at the same place where you stopped reading last 
>    time;
>    4. typesetting should be as beautiful and complex as a website can be;
>    5. content should be truly multimedia, including live content from 
>    anywhere on the network. Audio books should be a mere byproduct of this 
>    feature;
>    6. authors should be allowed to multiply standpoints on its content;
>    7. readers should be able to reorganise the initial content, and also 
>    write above and around it;
>    8. for the paranoids out there or those who missed Tim O'Reilly's 
>    famous piece on piracy 
>    
> <https://www.oreilly.com/content/piracy-is-progressive-taxation-and-other-thoughts-on-the-evolution-of-online-distribution/>
>  
>    back in the days, book content should be easy to encrypt. Ebooks lending 
> to 
>    libraries might actually be a good use case.
>
> So we at *immatériel.fr <http://xn--immatriel-f4a.fr>* considered that 
> this territory was worth exploring and we dedicated our 2019 R&D efforts 
> into building a TW5 alternative format for customers who were regularly 
> buying ePubs at our experimental bookstore *7switch.com 
> <http://7switch.com>*. We had to move forward on two fronts in parallel:
>
>    - Converting our full catalog of 80K ePubs from more than 1000 (mostly 
>    French) publishers into TW5
>    - Figuring a way to display books in an homogeneous way, yet familiar 
>    enough for both people reading content on the Web and people used to ePub 
>    reading apps, while showing off their new TiddlyWiki nature.
>
> So I asked *Jeremy* if he'd welcome a sponsoring for such a project 
> through his company *Federatial* and, to my awe, he said yes of course! 
> Parallely, since I wasn't sure of how we should render the typical book 
> elements nor the typical features of an ebook reading app in a TW5 
> interface, I asked *JD*, one of our gifted community contributors to TW5 
> user interfaces, for ideas and preliminary tests. 
>
> Soon enough, the three of us had regular meetings, that eventually led to 
> a *preliminary release* of several great open source products that are 
> now embedded into every non-DRM books and extracts that you'll find at the 
> *7switch* ebookstore:
>
>    1. The first one is already included in the current prerelease of TW5: 
>    the dynaview plugin 
>    
> <https://tiddlywiki.com/prerelease/#%24%3A%2Fplugins%2Ftiddlywiki%2Fdynaview> 
>    allows content to come into view dynamically in response to familiar 
>    gestures like scrolling.
>    2. Next comes the *dynannotate* plugin, which will soon make its way 
>    to 5.1.22, and is already included in books and extracts that you can find 
>    on *7switch*. With it, you can annotate content in a various number of 
>    ways.
>    3. Then you'll find the *ePub-slicer* plugin, a tool to convert any 
>    ePub file into a plugin that essentially contains a list of small content 
>    chunks (aka tiddlers!) which can be revealed during the scroll as you read 
>    the book in the browser. Thanks to their plugin nature, not only multiple 
>    converted books can be hosted in a single TW5 file, but also one can 
>    override book content without fear, since the original shadow tiddlers 
>    could be retrieved at any time. Note that the HTML parsing is not yet 
>    complete, as we'd like to be able to parse any ePub, whether their content 
>    has been well semantised or not. So if you see spurious </li> or 
>    </blockquote> every once in a while, don't be surprised: *you're 
>    looking at a work in progress*.
>    4. Finally, you'll also find JD's *TW Book Wrapper* plugin, which is 
>    responsible for most specific UI elements, from annotations management to 
>    the automatic language switching, based on your browser default language. 
>    By the way, we started with French and English as bu
>    ilt-in interface languages. If you'd like to submit more translations, 
>    you're welcome!
>
> Please have a try with any non-DRM books (or their extracts) that you'll 
> find on 7switch 
> <https://www.7switch.com/en/list/drmfree/lang-eng/new/page/1/sales>. Also 
> try to drag and drop your own ePubs (in so-called *Author Mode*) to add 
> books in these TW5 containers. And tell us what you think!
>
> Thank you for having read so far :-)
>
> Cheers, 
>
> Xavier.
>

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