Sentences with phrase «electronic books because»

Until the same service is available with books and customers can have a directory on their computer with «their books» on it, there will be unrest from customers that refuse to adopt electronic books because they inherently know that Amazon (or any other company) could, at any moment, yank the rug back out and make you pay for the same content again.
And the focus was on electronic books because they are so darned simple to produce and get to readers (even with the costs I'll talk about below.)

Not exact matches

The thrust of the cumulative argument of Cobb's book is that since Whitehead wrote statements that clearly imply that regional inclusion obtains between molecular and electronic occasions, we ought to be receptive to the suggestion that «soul» occasions include the regions of brain occasions and God includes the regions of all temporal occasions, because there is no principle involved in these latter two instances which has not been acknowledged by Whitehead himself in the case of the relations holding between molecular occasions and electronic occasions.
Money is also basic need of education because without money (How to make money online) students and teachers are unable to purchase books, notebooks and other such relevant things which is necessary for education but now due to the latest technology there is no need to purchase expensive books and paper because virtual field trips, electronic forms or mail, printed memo's, virtual labs, electronic textbooks, and the thousands of free online resources can all save money and give students or learners excellent educational experiences.
Because free electronic books are awesome, I'm spreading the word that authors Sharon Lee and Steve Miller are celebrating the release of the latest Liaden novel by doing a contest to hand out thirty - six copies of the omnibus edition of the first three novels, entitled The Dragon Variation.
And then your book will drop into high - priced electronic oblivion because to the publisher, that book is now just a property asset on their accounting ledger.
Because books are now stored on an electronic device, you can have as many of them as you want, and you can even access them across various devices.
If publishers are «terrified» of e-books it's mainly because a) they don't understand the technology, b) they don't believe that people actually want to read books on electronic devices, and c) the high - level manager in charge of print sales wants to protect his turf.
I have a friend that has to have all the newest gadgets, yet is waiting for my book to come out in paperback because she likes reading on paper better than electronic.
Electronic book covers are a whole different deal to print book covers because they must «pop» even in thumbnail form, and so often, it's the typeface that makes a difference between an okay cover and a really great cover.
But I really like this new initiative because it's not talk, it's action, and it's a pretty compelling approach to a new model of publishing that goes way beyond simply converting books into electronic form and, maybe, adding a few bells and whistles.
POGUEAnd I don't know if people — I think we need to really rethink the entire concept of these prices because the common man says they should cost less because they're not — there's no printing or binding or shipping or storing expenses for electronic books as there are with printed books.
This is very much more important than with paper books because there is so much more competition in the electronic field than there is in the paper field.
Partly because of the wider acceptence of electronic books, but also the public awareness of the technology.
Both Boarders and Barnes and Noble are in dire straights because of their overbloated retail chain, Barnes and Noble was seriously thinking of folding mid way last year, its only saving grace has been the popularity of their Nook E-Reader and selling electronic Books.
Traditional publishers complain about this, but honestly don't care much because they are moving from a nasty returns system in paper books that allowed a 4 % profit to a new system that gives them upwards of 40 % profit margins in electronic sales.
And there are so many people who can't buy every book they wan na read, so I'm just wondering if you or Diane may have some creative vision for how we might integrate electronic readers, because they're not going to go away into our public library system.
And I just wanted to say that, you know, the Kindle, the Nook, all the electronic readers have just been like a, you know, a breakthrough in technology in my opinion because every class that I signed up for in college thus far has had an electronic book available for the class.
Sure you can get your books on shelves, no issue, but many decide it's not worth the extra effort because it is so easy to get books into electronic bookstores.
It would be desirable to replace such battery, but it is hard to make, because batteries for many models electronic books are not on saling in shops.
It will continue to trickle sales in electronic form (because the publisher won't care anymore, the book is just out there, so the garden for that book is not being tended).
In reality, it improves the situation, because it is so easy to try electronic samples and the ease of checking the new book out after seeing the author on TV.
It does not make sense to offer our hardware in tech electronic stores, because our base of customers are book buyers.
Otherwise, I'll keep on going to half price books precisely because the price points aren't there for electronic publishing to make it worth my time, and I honestly don't have the funds to pay for more than a handful of trade paperback book editions.
Because there is a power shift going on, less to do with print versus electronic books than publishers versus authors.
There are many costumers out there just like me who want to have the book experience on an electronic device and they will continue to go with Kindle because the other options are uconfortable for reding, to bright for prolongued reading, slow, distracting AND they do not have 3G (let alone internatinally... I'm from Mexico).
In a typical book marketing campaign, Westwind Communications targets book reviewers at magazines, newspapers, and electronic media across the U.S. «Because our contacts in the media are exceptionally good,» explains Lorenz, «we have a high success rate with frequent placements.
All authors are welcome, regardless of how you published, what you write, etc. (You don't have to worry about your book being listed in an electronic catalog with an adult content book because we could always make separate catalogs for different kinds of books.
This is because electronic screens work by generating light, which may cause eyestrain or discomfort while reading text for long periods of time, while books simply reflect natural light from the environment.
That said, there are several books that I've been reading using the Kindle app simply because Amazon was the only source for electronic versions.
The worry they (legacy) seem to have is the electronic format «stealing» their print sales... I might have that wrong though... but that worry is also irrelevant as well because the sale of a book is the sale of a book... right?
This is another point to the open - web team of Berners - Lee and Co because — unlike the Kindle, which keeps its books prisoner behind a proprietary Amazonian fence — Kobo employs the open Electronic Book Publication Standard (EPUB) used on other readers, such as the Barnes & Noble Nook and Sony's Reader.
Kobo is the next major player because they are both international and will be vertical, allowing electronic books to be sold through cash registers in brick and mortar bookstores.
The much - anticipated electronic book reader is late coming to this country because Amazon is shopping around among Canadian telecoms, looking for the best deal on the cost of running its wireless capability, sources say.
Because the original Kindle was $ 399, it was only a «good deal» for the consumer who read many books on which they could save money by buying electronic.
In terms of canonical file format, journal publishing may have one less worry than book publishing, because many journals are moving away from print to focus exclusively on electronic delivery whereas most books still have a print component.
Because these multiple formats complicate the issue of identifying electronic versions, Baen and Webscriptions did not use DOIs to identify their e-books (even though some of their books had DOIs).
This is because electronic publishing allows us to easily put together as many books as we want in one file.
Consequently, this blog is devoted to electronic books simply because they are the future of publishing.
Q: Your website is called The Book Designer, and yet you blog about electronic publishing, in which authors / publishers have less and less to say about the design of their books, because the target delivery device is not defined.
I think print books will go away because of cost and it will all be electronic very soon.
I don't need to feel bad about not paying authors when I only read their book in pirated electronic format because no one is losing any sales are they?
The presumption that everyone will eventually read books on an electronic display of some sort in the future is so fundamental I haven't bothered to question it, mostly because nobody else does either.
But I'm putting my money on the electronic future of indie publishing, because of the control factor and the digital book eventually replacing the print version.
Also a little tip, if you take your Kindle to read from because... or your iPad, you can't read from a book because of the page noises, you have to read from something electronic, turn off the Wi - Fi on all your devices.
This unusual maneuver, which Amazon says occurred because Orwell's publisher changed its mind about offering the electronic version of these titles, is all the more unsettling simply because readers already purchased the books and had their ownership of the item revoked.
I'm guessing you are considering buying this electronic photo book because you love your dog and want to learn how to help him or her live a longer and healthier life.
lolwot, in the past was: if you don't give 10 % to the church, St. Peter will get angry and will sent hailstorms and create floods; after Darwin published his book — the shonky scientists started with GLOBAL warmings and ice ages to scare the people — only now because of electronic media and communication technology — they are more loud — but the scare tactic doesn't work; because people are not buying the new socialist religion of worshiping the CO2: http://globalwarmingdenier.wordpress.com/q-a/
As to the use of experts in electronic records management, it is not yet the practice of lawyers to use such experts, but it should be because the Evidence Acts require it in order to use electronic records as evidence — e.g. s. 31.2 (1)(a) of the Canada Evidence Act, and, s. 34.1 (5), (5.1) of the Ontario Evidence Act, and the Evidence Acts of 9 other jurisdictions in Canada contain the same requirement (including the records provisions of Book 7 of the Civil Code of Quebec).
And because rentals are often used books, they may lack those supplemental materials mentioned earlier, such as CDs and electronic access codes.
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