0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 5774 times.
Kindle doesn't support ePub or any other format with DRM, except their own AZW, of course. And non-DRM content in most other formats has to be emailed to your Kindle account and be converted before you can read it. That means almost everything you read on your Kindle has to pass through Amazon's hands. Also, Amazon has the capability to remove content from your Kindle, without your permission, and has done so in the past. Ironically, 1984 & Animal Farm were the works removed.
The Nook supports ePub, which is the standard used by the publishing industry. So you can download content from any provider that usee the ePub format, i.e., almost every publisher that has made their catalog available digitally. That includes DRM and non-DRM protected material.
The Sonys are the most open, they support pretty much every non-proprietary format available, with or w/o DRM.
However, I read primarily for pleasure and I'm not willing to compromise my reading experience for convenience. When I do get an eReader it will be one the allows me to read as closely to the way I do now as possible. That means it has to display enough text or at least change pages fast enough so that I don't feel like I'm operating a device, rather than reading a book.
If you read the quote I posted earlier, you will see that you can upload files to a Kindle using a USB cable from your computer.
Amazon has stated that they will not remove content from customer's devices in the future.
Why would you buy an ebook with DRM? DRM means it doesn't really belong to you, and you may be denied access to it at some point for various reasons.
You're missing the point. Unless it is one of the few formats supported by the Kindle (.azw, .txt, .mp3, unprotected .mobi, etc.) you have to send it to Amazon for conversion before you can upload it using the USB connection. You cannot download a .pdf from a website, your computer or even from Amazon directly to your Kindle. You can't view an ePub file at all.
Actually, I believe Jeff Bezos and Amazon really mean that. However, it still bothers me a lot that they even felt the need to build that capability into the Kindle. It also means that no matter what their intentions, the capability exists and a court order trumps good intentions.
the publisher, distributor or retailer. So an author who is strongly in favor of IP rights may require DRM, regardless of the potential loss of electronic sales. I don't like DRM, but in some cases I may be willing to accept it.
BTW, anyone who downloads from iTunes is almost certainly "renting" DRM protected content. Anyone who accepts the Apple model is being hypocritical if they won't also accept DRM on eBooks.
The standard edition you've all been getting for free will remain free, though. We won't change that at all.
It's trivially easy to convert any number of formats to ones that the Kindle supports. I could even extract the text from a pdf.
I guess I would never buy an ebook by such an author then. By accepting DRM at all, you are supporting it. The big media companies will only get rid of it if if hurts them in the pocketbook. Otherwise they'll just figure they can shove it down our throats, and in your case they're right.
Out of curiousity, how many people download your mag per issue?
Just over 200,000 readers now, with a slightly higher readership in Europe/UK vs. US/Canada. According to our Google metrics data, TONE is now read in 121 countries. Crazy....