1 / 29

E-BOOKS THROUGH THE LIBRARY and the E-READERS to READ THEM

E-BOOKS THROUGH THE LIBRARY and the E-READERS to READ THEM. Presented by David Eckert Assist. Dir., Craighead Co. Jonesboro Public Library. Pulling your hair out???. Too many e-readers to choose from?. Features to Consider. Content Availability Display Connectivity Storage Space

jiro
Download Presentation

E-BOOKS THROUGH THE LIBRARY and the E-READERS to READ THEM

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. E-BOOKS THROUGH THE LIBRARYand the E-READERSto READ THEM Presented by David Eckert Assist. Dir., Craighead Co. Jonesboro Public Library

  2. Pulling your hair out???

  3. Too many e-readers to choose from?

  4. Features to Consider • Content Availability • Display • Connectivity • Storage Space • Audio Features • Battery Life • Ergonomics • Price

  5. Content Availability • EPUB vs. MOBI • Most e-readers vs. Amazon e-readers • Other supported formats • Word docs and PDF • Work-a-round: • Public Libraries

  6. Display Options • Screen size • Fonts • E-Ink or backlit • Screen resolution

  7. Connectivity • Wired • Wireless • 3G • Internet browsing capabilities • Library Connectability

  8. Storage Space • Internal memory • Expandable memory

  9. Audio Features • Text to Speech capabilities • MP3 Player • Audio Books

  10. Battery Life • Depends on the mode used • Wireless • E-ink • Recharge Time

  11. Ergonomics • Touch Screen • Keyboard • Weight • Landscape mode • Ease of page turning

  12. Price vs. Value(or the Bang for your Bucks)

  13. E-Ink Readers and Color Readers • E-Ink Readers: • Built primarily for reading • Usually smaller, lighter, less expensive • Battery life is usually longer • Color Readers: • Reader/tablet hybrids • Backlit screens • Usually larger, heavier, more expensive • Usually can surf the net

  14. The Kindle E-Reader Family • Four Models • Kindle • Kindle Touch • Kindle Keyboard • Kindle DX • Commonalities • MOBI e-book format • Free cloud storage • Download library books wirelessly

  15. Kindle Head to Head #1 • Kindle ($79) vs. Kindle Touch ($99 or $149) • Both have: • e-ink on 6” screen • Wi-Fi • BUT the Touch has: • Touch screen • Battery lasts twice as long • 4GB vs. 2GB • Can upgrade to 3G • Text to Speech technology WINNER: Kindle Touch

  16. Kindle Head to Head #2 • Touch ($99 or $149) vs. Keyboard ($139) • Both have: • e-ink on 6” screen • Wi-Fi and 3G (with $149.00 Touch) • Same battery life • 4GB Memory • One has a touch screen, one has a keyboard WINNER: Touch

  17. Kindle Head to Head #3 • Touch ($99 or $149) vs. Kindle DX ($379): • Both have: • Wi-Fi and 3G (with $149 Touch) • E-ink • 4GB memory • Touch has: • Longer battery life • Touch screen • DX has: • Bigger screen • Keyboard • BUT $230+ Price Difference???? Come on!!! WINNER: Touch

  18. The Nook E-Reader Family • Two Nook Models • Simple Touch • Simple Touch with Glowlight • Commonalities: • EPUB Format • Expandable memories to 32GB • Wi-Fi • Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary • Ability to share e-books between devices

  19. Nook Head to Head • Simple Touch ($99) vs. Glowlight Touch ($139) • Both have: • E-Ink • 6” displays • 2GB memory expandable to 32GB • Glowlight Touch: • Of course, the Glowlight • Power adapter ($18 dollar value) • Anti-glare screen protector • Lighter than the Simple Touch WINNER: Glowlight Touch

  20. Amazon E-Reader vs. B & N E-Reader • Kindle Touch ($99) vs. Nook Glowlight ($139) • Both have Wi-Fi and 6” touch screens • Kindle Touch Advantages: • 2 month battery charge • Text-to Speech capabilities • No need to connect to a computer to download books • Glowlight Advantages: • Glowlight • Power adapter included • Uses the ePUB format WINNER: Kindle Touch

  21. Sony PRS-T1RC vs. Kindle Touch • PRS-T1RC ($129) vs. Kindle Touch ($99) • Both have Wi-Fi, 6” touch screens, similar battery life, audio capabilities. • PRS-T1RC advantages: • Less than 6 oz. • Stylus for editing • 12 dictionaries (10 foreign language) • Expandable memory to 32GB • Shorter recharging time (2.5 hours) • Kindle Touch advantages: • Text-to-Speech capabilities • More on-board memory WINNER: Kindle Touch (maybe)

  22. BeBook Neo vs. Kindle Touch • BeBook Neo ($159) vs. Kindle Touch ($99) • Both use E-Ink on 6” touch screens and Wi-Fi • BeBook Neo advantages: • 512MB initial memory but expandable to 16GB • Internet connection through Wi-Fi • EPUB Format (Universal) • Kindle Touch advantages: • Download books through Wi-Fi • Text-to-Speech capabilities • $60 cheaper • Half as light as the BeBook WINNER: Kindle Touch

  23. Kobo Head to Head • Kobo Wi-Fi ($69) vs. Kobo Touch ($79 or $99) • Both have: • 6” screens • 2GB memory Expandable to 32GB • Wi-Fi • Soft cloth Backs • Kobo Touch advantages: • Touch screen • Battery life twice as long • More font styles and sizes • Wired Magazine’s Editor’s 2012 E-Reader Pick WINNER: Kobo Touch

  24. Kobo Touch vs. Kindle Touch • Kobo Touch ($79 or $99) vs. Kindle Touch ($99) • Both have: • 6” e-Ink touch screens • Same Price • Wi-Fi • Kobo Touch advantage: • Expandable memory to 32GB • Kindle Touch advantages: • Text-to- Speech and audio capabilities • Twice as long battery life • Better ergonomics for turning pages STILL THE WINNER: Kindle Touch!!!

  25. Our Champion!!!! • Kindle Touch Highlights • 6” Touch Screen • 4GB memory on the device • 2 month battery charge • Text-to-Speech capabilities • Can zoom font sizes with a “pinch” • Built in stereo MP3 player • Can download library books wirelessly through the Amazon store

  26. Websites for Product Info and Comparisons • Devices: • Kindles: www.amazon.com • Nooks: www.barnesandnoble.com • Sony: www.store.sony.com • BeBook: www.mybebook.com • Kobo: www.kobobooks.com • Reviews and Comparisons: • www.wireless-reading-device.net/ebook-reader-comparison-chart • ebook-reader-review.toptenreviews.com/ • ereadercomparisonchart.org/

  27. OverDrive DiscussionWith the help of Laura Keese, LMSFountain Lake Middle School • Overdrive Business Model: • For Public Libraries – Based on Population • Money committed each year has a 70/30 split • 70% for maintenance • 30% for materials • Single Library vs. Consortium • How does it compare to a school plan?

  28. School & Public Library Partnership:The Good and the Bad (No Ugly) • The Bad: • No separate portal • Public might check out titles you need • Cannot control checkout periods • Kindle Titles: 7 days • All others: 14 days • The Good: • All funds can be used for books • PL takes care of all technical issues • PL takes care of ordering all books • Maybe kids will use their library cards to check out other material

  29. Conclusion • Best Device Value: The Kindle Touch • Best Content Value: A Partnership with your friendly neighborhood Public Library • Questions?? • My email: david@libraryinjonesboro.org • Tech guy: ben@libraryinjonesboro.org

More Related