Sentences with phrase «ebook revolution»

The phrase "ebook revolution" refers to the significant change caused by the rise of electronic books (ebooks). It implies the transformation of traditional book publishing and reading practices due to the availability and popularity of digital books. It represents a shift from physical books to digital formats, allowing for easier access, storage, and distribution of literature. Full definition
There's a lot of junk out there, as we all know, but books like yours prove the value of the entire ebook revolution.
Part of the problem is the thinking that publishing has become so simple in the new ebook revolution.
During the early days of the indie ebook revolution, it was relatively easy for a quality writer to earn good income self - publishing low - priced ebooks.
Ransacked by the internet and teetering on the edge of the real ebook revolution, the publishing world is understandably afraid of what's next.
I'm a traditionally published author and I have no problem with the «Tsunami of Crap» that is the self publishing ebook revolution.
2009 will go down in publishing history as Year Zero for the upcoming ebook revolution.
Borders heard about the whole ebook revolution that was occurring and decided to get in bed with Amazon to turn its fortunes around.
I say that the eBook revolution will do for book publishing what the Gutenberg press did for book printing.
Thanks to Amazon, the eBook revolution and social media, the publishing world has been turned on its head.
David lives at the intersection of technology and publishing by helping companies, associations and publishers navigate and profit from the eBook revolution and content marketing.
A more mature society, able to reject that Lotto Syndrome, may emerge due to the ebook revolution.
Much has changed, but E Ink still sets the standard for technology driving the eBook Revolution.
Mr. Edgerly, i read you post «The KND Kindle Chronicles Interview: Going Back to the Roots of the eBook Revolution» on the Kindle Nation Weekender that i subscribe to and i'm hoping you can help me with a problem.
And I think the eBook Revolution has powered up to the boring old «legitimate business» world.
Most of the big news in eBooks these days comes out Amazon's headquarters in Seattle, but the eBook Revolution actually started right here in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Click here for Kindle Nation Daily link September 14, 2012 Most of the big news in eBooks these days comes out Amazon's headquarters in Seattle, but the eBook Revolution actually started right here in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
I think the message is that the ebook revolution is more than growing.
The bookseller jumped into the eBook revolution in 2009 with an online store and their own flagship device.
My reasons for the plateaus: the response of libraries to the eBook revolution and cheap high quality indie titles.
Tim Waterstone, the founder of the Waterstones bookstore chain recently said «I think you read and hear more garbage about the strength of the ebook revolution than anything else I've known.
The company has announced that 2013 has been a year of exponential growth and that they have signed up over 500 + new libraries to join the eBook revolution.
Not everyone is bullish about the eBook revolution happening in the UK.
Sessions Include: Dan Poynter — Book Promotion 2013 Guy Kawasaki — Self - Publishing for APES: Author, Publisher, Entrepreneur Mark Coker — The Ebook Revolution (Founder of Smashwords) Carla King — The Writing Process for Nonfiction Books Michael Larsen — A Literary Agent's Perspective on How to Get a Book Deal Dana Lynn Smith — How to -LSB-...]
Given the numbers of ebook stores that have gone belly up in recent years, the question of ownership rights cuts to the heart of the ebook revolution.
As much as I love the ebook revolution, there is definitely a tangible link to the past having a physical object, weathered and worn as all physical objects become in our world.
As amazing as this ebook revolution has been, it's still only 20 - 30 % of the market, and I'm not going to ignore the possibilities to reach the other 70 - 80 % of readers.
They all started publishing well before the ebook revolution, and they still have plenty of fans even at a slow release rate today.
I wanted to experience first - hand what this eBook revolution was all about.
The following is part one of a five part excerpt from Jason Merkoski's Burning the Page: The eBook revolution and the future of reading.
Time and technology march onward, and since I'd rather read books than sniff them, I'm happy to join the eBook revolution.
This myth is logical because of how indie publishing came about with the ebook revolution and then slowly indie publishers (writers) started understanding that with a little extra work, they could do a paper book.
The following is part two of a five part excerpt from Jason Merkoski's Burning the Page: The eBook revolution and the future of reading (click here to read Part One and here's Part Two).
Five hundred years later, on the eve of the ebook revolution, I settled in to sleep the night before we launched the Kindle.
Best of all, the ebook revolution has challenged the master / slave relationship that had been created between the big publisher and the lowly author.
As brick and mortar stores like Barnes & Noble or Border's try to take a shot at Amazon and have some success stories to tell, the fact of the matter is that they will have to undergo serious corporate restructuring in the face of the eBook revolution.
The following is part two of a five part excerpt from Jason Merkoski's Burning the Page: The eBook revolution and the future of reading (click here to read Part One).
The ebook revolution was bloodless, in the sense that there were no human casualties.
Many writers want to get in on the eBook revolution, but they don't know how to convert a Word file to an eBook, or how to format a file so that Amazon and Smashwords won't horribly mangle it during their conversion processes.
The following is part four of a five part excerpt from Jason Merkoski's Burning the Page: The eBook revolution and the future of reading (click here to read Part One and here's Part Two, and here's Part Three).
In many ways, getting self - published titles into libraries hasn't changed since the ebook revolution: authors still have to prove that they have quality products that fit the collection.
I didn't want to get left behind in the ebook revolution,» Chabon said recently.
They are the pioneers of the technology that made the eBook Revolution possible, and they're still going strong, headquartered now in Taiwan.
«Students and teachers are embracing the eBook revolution in a big way,» says Steve Potash, OverDrive CEO, in the release.
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