¡Últimas horas! 1 año de Premium al 25% de dto ¡Lo quiero!

Podcast
The Reading Edge Podcast
By Len Edgerly
3
0
Conversations about the eBook Revolution Hosted by Len Edgerly
Conversations about the eBook Revolution Hosted by Len Edgerly
TRE 31 Copia Calling
Episode in
The Reading Edge Podcast
Anthony Antolino
Tony Antolino, senior vice president of DMC Worldwide and a co-creator of Copia, has been involved with Copia from its beginnings about two years ago. DMC Worldwide is a privately held company with a 56-year history. Copia is just about to launch via applications for desktop, iPad and browser, and they expect to begin offering e-reader devices in the fall.
The Copia Beta that I’ve been trying reminds me of Goodreads, the social network for readers launched in December of 2006 that now has 3.5 million members who have added 100 million book titles. There’s also LibraryThing which describes itself as a community of 1 million book lovers. So there is lots of competition in this promising area of social media for readers. Copia appears to be a serious entrant, with 100 DMC employees having worked on the project full time for two years.
My interview with Tony took place by Skype and phone on August 18, 2010. Click here for a March, 2010, video of Tony talking with O’Reilly Media’s Joe Wikert
Click here to download this episode.
35:35
TRE 25 Part 2 of Interview by Bryan Person
Episode in
The Reading Edge Podcast
Social media evangelist Bryan Person did Part 2 of our conversation about the iPad on Thursday April 15, 2010. This gave me a chance to revisit my expectations on how good a reading device the iPad would be compared with the Kindle.
We spoke 12 days after I had bought my 16GB WiFi-only iPad at the Apple Store at the Cherry Creek Mall in Denver. (Click here for video of my memorable entrance into the store.) In that time, my fascination with the device kept growing.
In this interview, Bryan and I discuss the issue of “serious readers” and whether they will be drawn more to the Kindle than the iPad. I have to confess that since our conversation, I am less inclined to make this distinction. I have read too many accounts like this one of people using the iPad for very serious reading, and my own experience has shown me that I am perfectly at home reading on the iPad for up to an hour. Yes, I sense some discomfort in my eyes from the LCD screen, but the ability to turn down the brightness from within most of the iPad reading apps I use–iBooks, Kindle, Kobo, and Stanza, but not Barnes & Noble–makes it manageable.
I remain in love with my Kindle and am quite sure that reports of its demise are exaggerations, as Mark Twain would have put it. I don’t see this as an either-or proposition. The iPad’s arrival is wondrous, for many reasons beyond the realm of reading books. The Kindle owns the outdoors, and any time I go with Darlene to read outside at a cafe, the iPad stays at home. At home, sometimes I pick up the Kindle, and sometimes I pick up the iPad. I haven’t figured out which situation is which, but I’m having lots of fun experimenting.
And tomorrow, I’ll have another device to explore–the Alex by Spring Design. Stay tuned!
CORRECTION: The monthly price of The Wall Street Journal iPad app is $17.29, which is $2.30 more than The Financial Times US edition on Kindle at $14.99. In the interview, I guessed that the Journal is $5 more.
Click here to download audio of the interview by Bryan.
25:12
TRE 24 Reading, Writing and Twitter?
Episode in
The Reading Edge Podcast
Valerie Ellis, left, and Michelle Taransky
My Bennington MFA classmate Valerie Ellis and I attended a thought-provoking session on April 8, 2010, at The Association of Writers and Writing Programs (AWP) national convention here in Denver. The title was “The Networked Poetry Classroom,” and one of the panelists was Michelle Taransky, who works full-time at the University of Pennsylvania‘s Kelly Writers House in Philadelphia.
Michelle is also the author of Barn Burned, Then , selected by Marjorie Welish as winner of the 2008 Omnidawn poetry prize. She teaches at Temple University and is Reviews Editor for Jacket2 .
Valerie and I the night before the conference had been discussing the use of technology in classrooms, so Michelle’s tales of streaming Twitter in her classroom gave us lots to consider.
UPDATE: Click here for Michelle’s course weblog.
Click here to download this episode.
18:01
More of Len Edgerly View more
The Kindle Chronicles
A weekly podcast about the Kindle and eBooks with in-depth conversations with guests--authors, technology experts, book industry analysts, Amazon execs, educators, agents, readers, and more. Updated
You may also like View more
Inteligencia Artificial con Jon Hernandez
En este Podcast charlamos con gente que esta adoptando o siendo afectada por la IA, el objetivo es traer todos los puntos de vista posibles sobre esta revolución tecnológica que va a cambiar la sociedad. Charlas distendidas y tranquilas sobre temas que nos afectan a todos de la mano de los que más saben o más sufren la IA. Updated
Applelianos
Podcast de tecnología, principalmente de noticias sobre el mundo de Apple, con un grupo de compañeros expertos en los temas expuestos, descubre la información adecuada con nosotros. Updated
TISKRA
Podcast sobre tecnología de consumo y software. Análisis estratégico del mundo Apple, Google, Microsoft, Tesla y Amazon así como de todos aquellos productos de entretenimiento y su posible impacto económico y social. Conducido por @JordiLlatzer Updated




