Tag Archive: iBooks

Amazon Takes on the iPad in New Ad

Amazon has directly challenged the iPad in their latest commercial. The premise of the ad is that a man cannot read his iPad in direct sunlight due to the glossy screen whereas a women with a Kindle can read perfectly fine. There is also the suggestion Amazon believes the iPad is too expensive. Click here to view the commercial for yourself.

While the problem is a real problem (trust me, it can be very frustrating), iPad users can be comforted by the fact they can access the same array of Kindle books via the app. Also, if you flip the situation to low light, the iPad is easily viewable whereas the Kindle is not.

How to: Open and Sync PDF files on iBooks for iPad

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For those that are having trouble getting the new iBooks (Version 1.1+) to mix with PDFs, here’s 2 really simple ways to activate the “PDFs” tab and sync PDF files in iBooks on the iPad.

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Sync PDFs as iBooks on iTunes

  1. Update iBooks to 1.1 if you haven’t done so yet
  2. Open iTunes and click on the “Books” tab under Library section
  3. Drag & Drop your PDFs right in iTunes while you’re in the Books tab
  4. Connect your iPad to your computer, click on “Books” within the iPad data sync window
  5. You’ll see the PDFs you just dragged and just simply Sync ‘em to your iPad

PDF via Email Method

  1. Send yourself an email with the PDF(s) attached
  2. Go to the Mail app (Not the browser) on the iPad and open the email you just sent
  3. Tap the PDF file listed to download
  4. Tap on it again to view the PDF
  5. Tap on the “Open In…” button on the top right and choose iBooks
  6. You now have the “PDFs” tab in iBooks

If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to put them in the comments below or feel free to shoot me an email about it. And if you liked the the guide, please bookmark us or subscribe to our RSS feed (Or do it via Pulse News Reader) for future iPad news, guides, accessories review, giveaways and more!

Here’s a picture guide if you’re having trouble following:

iBookstore to sell books directly from Authors

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Apple will begin to distribute material from self-published authors in their iBookstore on the iPad and when the iPhone O.S 4.0 is released, the iPhone and iPod Touch as well.

Self-publishing has been steadily moving away from it’s stigmatized beginnings as being the route to authorship for the talentless and vain to the point where it is commanding respect from the big publishing companies. Many of whom use the self-publishing market as a cost-free testing ground for the best authors, looking for those who sell and then signing them up. This is obviously a huge incentive for those looking to publish.  Up to this point, the route for those looking to self-publish would be to use a print-on-demand service (which is becoming increasingly prevalent), enlisting the help of a self-publishing company who command fees of around $1000 or to self-publish an ebook. Now there is a fourth option, to publish an iBook.

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Authors will be able to have their books published on the iBookstore without the need for an agent or publisher. It appears as if Apple is following on from it’s successful App Store model in which virtually anyone with an idea can be successful. Apple is allowing authors near total control with writers being able to set prices and global distribution locations for their work, much like they do with developers for the App Store. What isn’t clear at this point is whether Apple will carry over the model of taking 30% of the profits as they use in the App Store. Another point of uncertainty is whether there will be a reviewal process of any kind and if so, how strict will it be? Apple has come under pressure due to it’s app reviewal process, some describing it as totalitarian in nature. The guidelines set out by Apple stipulate the book be in EPUB 1.0.5 format and have an ISBN. They also state that payments will only be made once an author has sold a certain amount of books; Apple has not stated what this amount is as of yet.

It is hard to know at this point how this move will pan out. Will the iBookstore be filled with the half-hearted attempts of those with a slow Saturday afternoon? Will Apple operate a stringent reviewal process? Or will those who are genuinely talented who have been given a chance to shine be successful and championed? I for one hope so.

[Submit iBooks > iTunes Connect]

A Look at forthcoming Penguin iPad Books

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Penguin Group CEO John Makinson revealed some of the company’s forthcoming titles that’s coming to the iPad at the FT Digital Media & Broadcasting Conference in London yesterday [paidContent:UK].

“We will be embedding audio, video and streaming in to everything we do. The .epub format, which is the standard for ebooks at the present, is designed to support traditional narrative text, but not this cool stuff that we’re now talking about.”

As shown in the video below, the “books” resemble more like applications than traditional e-books, just what we would imagine books to be on the iPad, “very interactive learning experiences.” In fact, Makinson says that most of the “books” will be sold through the App Store as opposed to the iBooks Store.

“So for the time being at least we’ll be creating a lot of our content as applications, for sale on app stores and HTML, rather than in ebooks. The definition of the book itself is up for grabs.”

When asked about the 30/70 Split with Publishers, Makinson replied with, “this is better than the equivalent print agency model, in which publishers let retailers keep 50 percent.”

Internal iPad Training to begin March 10?

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As we approach late March for the Wi-Fi iPad launch, Apple readies to ramp up marketing for the iPad and prepares Apple Store employees for iPad training. According to a new report on examiner, Apple Store training for the iPad will begin around March 10. The actual iPad release date has not been set in stone yet, but we’ll looking at a very likely March 26 launch. It was also noted that the 3G iPad may see an April or May release now, we reported that there may be an iPad shortage yesterday.

In addition, we learn that iPad commercials will start to air on March 15, with focus to show off the iBooks Store and the iPad’s capability as an E-Reader with the iBooks App.

Lastly, folks camping out for the iPad at launch day will receive a “special gift.”

McGraw-Hill CEO confirms iPad

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On CNBC today, McGraw-Hill CEO, Harold McGraw III has outright confirmed the Apple iPad announcement that is taking place tomorrow. He goes on to say that it’ll run an iPhone style OS (iPhone OS 3.2) and that it’s just “terrific”. McGraw-Hill will be one of the major book publishers to offer ebooks on the iPad.

“Yeah, Very exciting. Yes, they’ll make their announcement tomorrow on this one. We have worked with Apple for quite a while. And the Tablet is going to be based on the iPhone operating system and so it will be transferable. So what you are going to be able to do now is we have a consortium of e-books. And we have 95% of all our materials that are in e-book format. So now with the tablet you’re going to open up the higher education market, the professional market. The tablet is going to be just really terrific.”

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Update: The iPad does indeed run a iPhone-like OS. And to help kick off the release of the iBooks Store, Apple has partnered up with 5 major book publishers including, Penguin, HarperCollins, SIMON & SCHUSTER, macmillan (Part of McGraw-Hill) and hachette. With more to come.