You can now rent textbooks from the Amazon Kindle Store

Today Amazon announced the opening of its new Kindle Textbooks store (www.amazon.com/kindletextbooks). Titles will be available to rent for periods from 30 to 360 days, and you can increase the rental period in increments as small as one day, or purchase license the book outright at any point.

Amazon is crowing that students can save up to 80% on their textbooks by renting them from the Kindle Store, but The Digital Reader did a price comparison on a random textbook and tweeted that it’s still cheaper to buy and then resell a print edition.

I think the more compelling feature is that any notes or highlights will be saved on Amazon’s servers under the customer’s Kindle account, just like other notes and highlights, and will remain available even after the rental period ends.

www.amazon.com/kindletextbooks

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ReadBeam makes it easy to read newspapers and blogs on your ereader

If you don’t want to use Calibre, or can’t be bothered to figure out how to use it to subscribe to news feeds and send them to your ereader, you might want to give ReadBeam a try. The service offers around two dozen popular blogs and online newspapers. You’ll have to sign up with a working email address, and then the site will send your selected news feeds daily.

If you use a Kindle, you can either authorize ReadBeam to send content directly to your device’s email address, or you can leave it blank and you’ll receive the Kindle-friendly .mobi files directly, which you can then copy over. They don’t always work (the International Herald Tribune was unreadable for me, for example), but hey, it’s not like it has to cost you anything to try it out.

The service is free for now, but on the ReadBeam blog there’s a post from last April that suggests the developer has considered offering some sort of freemium service to let you subscribe to feeds outside the default set. Or you can do it yourself on Calibre, of course.

[found via The Digital Reader

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Today’s Bargain Book: “The Adventurous Boy’s Handbook” by Stephen & Finn Brennan

“The Adventurous Boy’s Handbook: For Ages 9 to 99″ by Stephen and Finn Brennan

Cashing in on the success of “The Dangerous Book for Boys”, this nostalgic mashup of boys’ guides from early last century includes topics on camping, starting fires, fishing, and treating stings and bites.

Price: $0.00
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Kindle 3G with Special Offers now only $139

Amazon just announced that AT&T has agreed to “sponsor” the Kindle 3G with Special Offers—or more plainly, the ad-supported Kindle—and dropped the price by another $25. At $139, it’s now the same price as the regular Wi-Fi Kindle model, which is a little surreal and hints that Amazon’s experiment with ad-supported hardware is proving successful.

Of course, it’s also a good way for Amazon to remain relevant in the device war this summer, after being upstaged pretty dramatically by both the Nook and Kobo touchscreen readers. The one thing a $139 Kindle 3G has over either of those newer, sexier models is, well, free 3G connectivity. (They both offer Wi-Fi only.)

As to what AT&T’s sponsorship entails, Amazon’s press release offers no details, although I’m guessing you’re going to be seeing a lot of targeted ads for AT&T services on your Kindle. Probably not anything about AT&T’s iPad 3G plan, though.

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Want to see ConsumerReports.org’s ereader reviews and ratings? Free access today only

Consumer Reports is one of the original paywall publications, and for good reason—they don’t take outside advertising or have corporate sponsors, and they are complete geeks when it comes to thoroughly testing every product they review. (Believe me, I’ve visited their home office before.) Because of this, it’s nearly impossible to find the details of their in-depth reviews unless you subscribe or thumb through the magazine at a library or bookstore.

Today, however, they’re offering free access to their website for 24 hours. You have to register, but there’s no credit card info required, just name, address, and email. There’s also no verification process, so theoretically you can make up anything you want if you’d prefer to remain private.

You’ve probably already heard that Consumer Reports recently named the new Nook Simple Touch ereader the best of the 6″ models, beating out the Kindle 3 by one point (the scores were 78 and 77 respectively). But now you can see the full list, and see how everyone stacks up on a range of features and performance criteria.

Consumer Reports free access offer [via Consumerist]

Disclosure: I used to blog for Consumerist, which is owned by the parent organization that owns Consumer Reports. None of that past professional relationship has any bearing on this post, however.

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Today’s Bargain Book: “The Fall Guy” by Simon Wood

The Fall Guy“The Fall Guy” by Simon Wood

When regular guy Todd Collins backs into a Porsche and busts its taillight, he leaves a fake note and thinks he’s done with the matter. What he doesn’t anticipate is that the car belongs to a drug kingpin, and the busted taillight leads to a police pullover, confiscated drugs, and one very angry criminal.

Price: $0.99
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Angry Robot introduces DRM-free subscription plan: pay flat fee, get every new title for a year

I’m subbing over at the esteemable Teleread blog for the month of July, and I just posted this news over there but thought it was something worth sharing with Booksprung readers as well. Also, it gives me a chance to blockquote and reference my own post elsewhere, which is not only meta but deeply satisfying on a purely narcissistic level.

Enough jibber jabber! I have firework accidents to get into and film for YouTube! Here’s the deal—and it’s not a bad one if you’re a heavy reader of sci-fi and fantasy books, and you like what Angry Robot has to offer:

…for £69, you get every new release for the next twelve months, which AR promises will consist of at minimum 24 titles. For books that are part of a series, subscribers will be able to purchase the earlier titles at a 30% discount (although the discount is only good for one use, apparently).

The titles are in EPUB format but since there’s no DRM, you can easily convert them to a Kindle-friendly format if necessary.

[via Teleread]

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Change the font on your Kindle without hacking it



I finally updated my installation of Calibre the other day and started playing around with the plugin manager under Preferences, and I found out that the Kindle Collections Manager plugin has a secret power: it can let you add a new font to your Kindle without requiring any sort of hack or jailbreak. If you want a different font but don’t want to mess with all the other risks/delights that come with hacking your Kindle, this is a nice clean alternative.

To use it, get the most current version of Calibre, then go into Preferences, scroll down to the green puzzle piece icon, and enable the Collection Manager plugin. The plugin you want is called “Kindle Collections”.

The plugin’s main purpose is, you guessed it, to help you manage your collections on your Kindle (which are a real pain to edit directly on the device). But there’s an extra settings pane where you can do your font replacement magic.

The developer has detailed instructions on this MobileRead Forums thread, but here’s the quick overview.

First, you have to find a compatible font set. Here are the requirements:

  1. It must be Truetype or OpenType format
  2. It must have four files, one for each of these variants:
    • regular
    • bold
    • italic
    • bold italic
  3. It must be renamed using this naming convention, where [name] is the font name and “ttf” is the extension (even if it’s an OpenType font):
    • [name]-Regular.ttf
    • [name]-Bold.ttf
    • [name]-Italic.ttf
    • [name]-BoldItalic.ttf

The plugin’s dev says Droid Serif is a good example of a compatible font set, if you’re not sure where to start. You can also check out the main Google Web Fonts page, and look for fonts that have a gold “4 variants” label.

Next, do all these things, preferably in the order given:

  1. Press the Home button on your Kindle, then connect it to your PC.
  2. Using your computer’s file browser, navigate to the Kindle volume and create a folder on the top level (next to “Documents” for example). Name it “fonts”.
  3. Copy your four renamed font files into this folder.
  4. Start Calibre and wait for your Kindle to show up, then select the “Kindle Collections” menu option.
  5. In the submenu, select “Modify Kindle Settings…”

  6. In the “Modify Settings” pane, check the “Allow using user font” checkbox and use the drop-down selector to the left of it to choose the font you just added.

  7. Hit the “Save” button, then eject your Kindle from Calibre. On my computer, I then have to quit Calibre before I can unmount it from OS X, but that may just be a quirk on my end.
  8. After a few seconds, your Kindle will reboot.
  9. Open a book, then press the “aA” button to go into font settings. Select the new “alt” option to activate your new font.

Two things to be aware of:

If you can’t open the book, the font you’re trying to use isn’t compatible. Repeat the process above but either select a different new font or select one of the default fonts, then eject and let the Kindle reboot.

If you tire of your new font and go back to your original system font on the Kindle, your new “alt” font will get sad and go away. To get it back you’ll have to repeat the procedure above.

That’s it! Sadly–and most likely because I’m doing it wrong, but I got distracted by the font issue and never went back to try again–my first attempt at actually editing my collections failed. I could see them in Calibre, and I was able to add new titles to one, but after I ejected the Kindle and it restarted, everything remained the same. It could have easily been my fault, though, so I still recommend it.

If you need better and more detailed instructions, or you want to ask the developer for help or give feedback, check out his MobileRead Forums thread. It’s the most official source of info on this plugin, and it looks like he’s still active on it.

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