iBooks Announced for iPhone
And the good news keeps getting better.As reported by Macworld.com, the iPhone OS 4.0 presentation today announced that the iBooks app, available on the iPad since its launch, will now be available along with the iBooks Store on the iPhone. As quoted by Macworld, this means that
In another borrowed feature from the iPad, Apple will make its iBooks e-reader available to the iPhone in iPhone OS 4.0. The iPhone offering will be a smaller version of the iPad app, but it allows for the same features, including purchasing from Apple’s iBookstore. And you’ll also be able to sync your place and bookmarks between multiple devices—leave off reading a book on your iPad, and you can start reading it in the same place on your iPhone.
It seems that self-publishers in Canada have had nothing but good news over the past three months. First the Amazon Digital Text Platform and Kindle app for iPhone came to Canada in January - allowing any writer to publish to the world's most popular media device at no upfront cost. Then, we found out that Apple was launching iBooks and that Smashwords and Lulu would be supporting it - allowing any reader to buy your work with the same account that they buy music, movies, and games with. But now we find out that iBooks will be available on the iPhone. It doesn't get any better than this. Now only if we could figure out how to get people to buy the millions of self-published novels that will appear on the platform.
Amazon's Digital Text Platform Comes to Canada and Changes Everything ... again
Wow, I can't believe that I missed this one. Back in January, Amazon announced that it was extending its groundbreaking Digital Text Platform to non-US authors. The complete story is here.
This is big news indeed for the cut-the-publisher-out-of-the-picture movement. Today, Amazon announced that it has opened its Kindle Digital Text Platform (DTP)--which is the Web-platform that allows writers to upload and sell their own Kindle books, meaning to self publish via the Kindle Store--to writers all over the world writing in English, German and French. Previously, only US-based writers could take advantage of the DTP.Here's more from Amazon, which also promises to add more languages to the DTP in the next few months: "'We are excited to make the self-service Kindle Digital Text Platform available to authors and publishers around the world,' said Russ Grandinetti, Vice President, Kindle Content. 'Now any content owner can offer English, German or French-language books to the fast-growing audience of Kindle owners around the globe.'"Whatever one's grievances with Amazon may be, it has done a pretty good job of creating an international bookstore. And now that authors living all over can upload books, we have the potential to get heretofore unimagined texts, though most of them will likely be very bad, and all of them will be hard to find.
For authors like myself, this is huge. My earlier game plan was to get my stories onto iPhones by going through Smashwords. Smashwords would have allowed me to sell my stories directly through the excellent Stanza app. However, there were a number of problems that bothered me. As I said at the time:
To format it properly for all of the different digital formats that are in use these days, Smashwords feeds the manuscript through a software program called the “Meat Grinder”. This gives the author almost no control over the final end product. In a perfect world, I would prefer to use Amazon’s Digital Text Platform. Amazon’s DTP would give more control over the final product and make my manuscript available to buy on both the Amazon Kindle and the Kindle app for iPhone. Rather than buying it through an obscure websitem, Amazon’s DTP would allow me to sell my novel on the popular Amazon store. Unfortunately, neither the DTP or the Kindle are available yet in Canada so I will have to stick to Smashwords for the time being.
Well Hallelujah. Christmas has come early. Not only do I avoid the atrocious formatting of the "Meat Grinder", not only do I get access to the world's biggest online e-book store, but my stories will now be available to everyone with a Kindle or the Kindle App for iPhone. Yes, I can now publish to the iPhone. All without paying a dime. Incredible. God Bless Amazon.For those of you who are not familiar with Amazon's Digital Text Platform, it is a service that allows you to log in with your Amazon account and upload your manuscript directly to the Amazon Store. There is no middlemen. There is no publisher. Just you, your audience, and Amazon taking 70% of every sale. The most significant barrier to publication has now been removed. The only problem is that now everyone can publish, so getting your manuscript noticed becomes a Herculean task.But that's a challenge I live for. I'm just happy that my wish has come true. I can now publish to Amazon, the iPhone, and to the Kindle. Now I have to just figure out how to publish to the iPad.