New Devices And The Web: The Mobile EBook Reader - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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New Devices And The Web: The Mobile EBook Reader

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... Reader. Brian Kelly. UK Web Focus. UKOLN ... coming in UK (e.g. free network access from PCs in shopping malls in Hong Kong) ... Cost $225 (at Amazon.com) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: New Devices And The Web: The Mobile EBook Reader


1
New Devices And The Web The Mobile E-Book Reader
Part 1
Abstract This talk gives an historical context
to the portable e-Book reader, tries to clarify
terminology and highlights the importance of
standards and a approaches to publishing. It will
be followed by a talk from Helen Petrie, City
University on Accessibility and Usability of
Mobile Devices
  • Brian Kelly
  • UK Web Focus
  • UKOLN
  • University of Bath

Email B.Kelly_at_ukoln.ac.uk URL http//www.ukoln.ac.
uk/
UKOLN is supported by
2
Devices
  • A history of mainstream computer devices

Old Paper tape Punch card Terminal VDUs Graphics
terminal Micro (e.g. BBC, Commodore, Sinclair)
Current PC Macintosh Unix / Linux workstations
and servers
Emerging E-Book WAP, GPRS, 3G Digital
TV PDAs Kiosks Laptop (for students) Networking
technologies Wireless LANs / Bluetooth
Failures? X Terminals NCs (Network
Computers) Thin Clients
Futures Watches Wearables Electronic ink
(eink.com)
3
Lessons
  • Marketplace
  • Need to be aware of marketplace developments
  • PC as winner / NC as failure / Mac as niche
    market
  • New products and apps are appearing rapidly and
    are disappearing too! (dot.com collapses)
  • Avoidance of proprietary lock-in
  • Avoid being locked into a device (cf. BBC Micro
    CBL applications dongles for PC software etc.)
  • Free readers arent enough (cf. browser plugins)
  • Royalty-free licences arent enough (cf. GIF)
  • Standards
  • Support for standards essential to
  • Minimise locking dangers
  • Allow resources to be reused

4
Current Position
  • Weve been here before. What is different today?
  • Information hungry society (multiple TV channels,
    email lists, SMS messages, voice mail, )
  • Pervasive networking coming in UK (e.g. free
    network access from PCs in shopping malls in Hong
    Kong)
  • Demand from a computer literate student intake
    (Nintendo generation)
  • Demand for universal access for all

5
Benefits Of Mobile Devices
  • Access Anytime, Any Place, Anywhere
  • Providing access from home / from anywhere will
  • Minimise transport costs, ease congestion, etc.
  • Minimise demand on institutional facilities
  • Offline reading should be a good thing, and its
    desirable to facilitate this
  • Devices Purchased By Users
  • Pass on capital and supports costs to students!
  • Laptop policy for students attempted at Warwick -
    but students are buying mobile phones and PDAs
    anyway
  • Universal Accessibility
  • Potential to provide access to resources for
    people with a range of disabilities

6
An Unsolicited Quote
  • I'm a real fan of eBooks - particularly because
    they are easier to hold than a book!  I have a
    spinal injury and I have read more books in the
    last 6 months that the previous 6 years
  • Unsolicited email message received by a colleague
    following a presentation she gave on e-Books

7
What Is An E-Book?
View of 96 in survey by Lynch (Electronic
Library Vol. 19 No. 6)
  • An e-book can be
  • A trendy name for any resource on the Web
  • A multimedia CD-ROM book accessible via desktop
    PC
  • A resource (often large and book-like) to which
    access is managed (and resource often
    encrypted)
  • A format which describes book-like structures
    andcorresponding functions
  • A resource designed for reading on small devices
  • Name of device used to read files in e-book
    format

This talk focuses on the small device (and
corresponding formats)
8
Mobile Devices
  • A range of different types of mobile devices are
    available

E-BookReader
PDA
Hybrid
Mobile Phone
Palms PDAs are availablefrom 100-400 Pocket
PCs are also available
eBookman hybrid e-book reader, MP3 player and
PDA (was at Argos for 169)
Traditional E-Book reader such as Rocket cost
about 249(Note company has changed hands)
Siemenshybrid phone, MP3 player and PDA
9
Exploiting The New Devices
  • The Researcher
  • Plugs mobile device into desktop machine and
    downloads W3C Web site for reading over weekend
  • Uses intelligent agent to find relevant resources
    from e-print archives and downloads to mobile
    device for reading on (long) train journey
  • The Student
  • On Friday evening in student bar, a friend
    mentions some useful reading resources. She
    takes out her mobile device and, using the
    Student Unions wireless network, she downloads
    the resources
  • The Social Animal
  • I plan my TV and radio viewing and visits to
    cinema using personalised AvantGo settings

10
Managing The New Devices
  • Procurement and Management of the Devices
  • IT services responsible for hardware procurement
    and manage PC clusters, but who will lend out the
    devices?
  • Do IT services negotiate preferred deals and
    leave users to buy?
  • Procurement And Management Of The Content
  • Clearly a task for the library?
  • Publishing Your Own Content
  • Lets not forget this
  • Who defines strategy for publishing?
  • cf. the Web initial interest in finding
    content, now in publishing

11
E-Book Format Wars
  • PDF Derivative
  • Based on Adobes PDF format
  • Well-established, well-used
  • Proprietary, and based on appearance rather than
    structure
  • XML Derivative
  • Based on XML
  • XML is now well-established
  • Open standards, and, being based based on
    document structure, supports re-purposing
  • My Proprietary Format
  • Other companies muscling in, and making an
    attractive offer to convert your documents to
    their locked format

12
Proprietary Formats
  • Warnings
  • Dangers of proprietary formats
  • Difficulties in reuse of resources
  • Difficulties in managing browser plugins

13
Peace In Our Time?
  • There has been
  • Recognition of the dangers of format wars
  • Agreement between the two main camps
  • Adoption of XML -)
  • See OeB (Open eBook Forum) Web site


Note also AAP standards work in rights
management, metadata and numbering see

14
Unresolved Issues
  • Standards issues still be resolved include
  • Digital Rights Management (DRM) The book
    publishing world is aware of the difficulties
    that music publishers found themselves in with
    applications such as NapsterEBX is a proposed
    DRM standard
  • Cataloguing InformationONIX (ONline Information
    eXchange) is a proposed standard for sharing
    catalogue information between publishers and
    libraries

15
Creating An E-Book
16
Viewing
  • Here is what the the resource looks like using
    their viewing software

E-ditorial This file was created using the
E-ditorial software. What is an e-book?A
simple explanation would be to say that an e-book
is a self-running computer program - an
executable file. i.e. this is a proprietary
format!
See .
17
Another Creation Tool
Drag and drop a Web resource
18
A Better Way
  • Is this ease of creation desirable
  • Its easy to create a HTML page
  • Its easy to update Web pages to HTML 4/XHTML
  • Its easy to create a PDF version
  • Its easy to create a WAP site
  • Its easy to make use of Flash
  • Is this true?

If you have a large Web site to maintain and wish
to support multiple devices (some which may not
take off) you will have to use an automated
approach to content management
19
Resource Reuse
  • You should store your resources in a neutral,
    richly-structured format (ideally XML)

B2B formats
Specialist formats
XML Database
Local script /CMS /XSLT transformation
XHTML
WML
Can you think of any valid reasons for storing
resources in a proprietary format, with limited
scope for reuse?
E-book format
  • Are
  • To provide encryption security
  • To outsource the digitisation
  • To get fancy bells and whistles
  • good enough reasons?

PDF
Print
20
Beyond The E-Book
  • PDAs are becoming more advanced e.g. consider
    the Franklin E-bookman
  • Advertisement
  • Listen to a song, Schedule a Meeting, Listen to
    a Book, Take a Note
  • It provides audio facilities
  • Subscription options (13 / month in US) for
    Audible books (see )
  • over 12,000 audiobooks from that ranges from
    bestsellers to radio programs to The Wall Street
    Journal
  • Cost 150 (at Amazon.com)
  • See

Note before buying one read the reviews!
21
E-Books and Talking Books
  • We are seeing convergence with other devices. For
    example consider the Rio consumer device
  • The Rio 800 comes with 64 MB of memory, enough
    for about an hour of MP3 music. It can also
    accommodate Windows Media Audio (WMA) files,
    which can stretch the playing time out to
    nearly two hours ... It plays Audible formats 2,
    3, and 4 and it holds up to 20.5 hours of
    programming.
  • Cost 225 (at Amazon.com)
  • Subscription options for Audible books (via
    Amazon.com but not Amazon.co.uk)

22
Digital Talking Books
  • New Digital Talking Book devices
  • Digital devices aimed at visually impaired
  • Use an XML DTD
  • Standards work coordinated by the Daisy
    Consortium
  • See
  • The proposed national standard for the Digital
    Talking Book (Z39.86-200x) is out for ballot
    see

23
An Example
LpPlayer from pplayer.html
  • An example of a digital talking book application
    can be seen by installing an application such as
    LpPlayer.
  • Although this runs on a PC, Microsoft (for
    example) have stated their PocketPC device will
    support the standard.

24
Conclusions
  • To conclude
  • There are many new consumer devices arriving
    which appear to have potential for general use
  • Will also have benefits for people with
    disabilities
  • Inevitably some devices and formats will fail to
    gain acceptance (remember BetaMax!)
  • Avoid proprietary lock-in
  • Dangerous if you choose a failure (Betamax)
  • Dangerous if you choose a winner (Microsoft)
  • Management of access to e-books is important
  • Creation of e-book resources also important
  • Lets not forget the usability and accessibility
    of these devices
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