Tag Archives: ibookstore

Y Books Promote Digital First With The Healing Code

Independent publisher, Y Books is to launch an ebook only edition of Dermot O’Connor’s The Healing Code in January 2012.

It will be the first time the bestselling book will be available as an eBook. The book was originally published by Hachette.

In the book O’Connor, who was diagnosed with a severe form of multiple sclerosis, explores how he resolved to heal himself and how eight years after diagnosis, Dermot is in the best physical and mental health of his life.

The digital move comes on the back of Y Books being the first domestic publisher to have its titles listed on the new Irish iBookstore after Apple launched the service at the end of September. These included Mick McCaffery’s The Irish Scissor Sisters and Cocaine Wars.

Speaking at the time Chenile Keogh, Managing Director/Publisher at Y Books, said, ‘This is a very exciting move for Y Books. As a young and innovative publisher we wanted to take advantage of the opportunities that advances in technology offer us. We are proud to be the first Irish publisher to have our full list available through iBooks Ireland just days after its launch, our titles are also available through the iBooks international stores.’

Apple iBookstore LIVE in Ireland

Irish consumers can now purchase ebooks through Apple’s iBooks reading application.

Irish readers can purchase Maeve Binchy (one of three features Bestselling Irish Authors) ebooks for as little as €1.99.

Apple’s Irish customers can buy in Euro and directly through iBooks/iTunes Ireland rather than being forced to use the US store unlike the Amazon Kindle offering.

Until this launch visitors to the Irish iBookstore were offered only public domain books or books that Apple had chosen to make available for free.

As well as launching their iBookstore business in Ireland, the tech company yesterday brought 25 other countries around Europe into the program including Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Replublic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portgal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland.

G&M To Launch EBooks In 2011

Gill & Macmillan, the largest Irish-based publisher, is to launch consumer targeted ebooks in the first quarter of 2011.

According to Tony Hetherington, Digital Developments manager, the company will ‘focus on device linked stores as the way forward.’

Hetherington highlighted Amazon’s Kindle, Apple’s iPad which is linked to their iBooks and iBookstore and also Kobobooks which has an ereader as part of their offering. Currently, iBooks offers only free public domain titles to Irish readers.

Gill & Macmillan has been experimenting with digital books in its educational business for some time having launched an ereader trial as early as 2008.

Hetherington said that the company had previously hoped to launch before Christmas but it still needed to put ‘a couple of things in place.’

The company relaunched its website earlier this year with a new ecommerce engine and has rolled out a number of mini-sites to support its titles.

Quick Link | The Australian Apple iBookstore launched paid content today | BOOKSELLER + PUBLISHER Online

The Australian Apple iBookstore launched paid content today with ebook titles from Hachette Australia, Murdoch Books, HarperCollins, Pan Macmillan, Hardie Grant, Melbourne University Publishing and John Wiley & Sons among the initial offerings.

Prices on the iBookstore range from $2.99 for ‘classics’, to a mid range for many titles of $11.99, $12.99 and $14.99, and as high as $39.99 for some titles.

via News Articles – BOOKSELLER+PUBLISHER Online – your gateway to the Australian book industry.

To E Or Not To E: A Beginner’s Guide To iPad Ereading Apps

This week Amazon announced that, for the first time ever on Amazon.com, ebooks had outsold hardbacks, proving that whilst some of us are reluctant to part with our beloved bound volumes, there is an ever increasing number embracing the concept of electronic reading.

And with Apple‘s much heralded iPad finally launching on these shores, we decided to take a look at some of the various apps available for reading books on your iPads, iPods and iPhones, and determine which, if any, are worth their salt.


All reviewed Apps are available for free on the iTunes App Store. Our thanks to O2 Ireland for lending us an iPad for testing. We downloaded our books & apps using their 3G simcard.


App: Kindle | Developer: Amazon | Rating: 2.5/5
A version of Amazon’s popular Kindle reader, this app’s great strength is undoubtedly its selection of titles. Using Safari it links directly to your Amazon account, offering a choice of over 400,000 books, and allows you to download sample chapters before you buy.

Kindle has one of the most appealing interfaces- they’ve recognised that swiping seems to be the most intuitive way of turning a page, a feature which some developers have criminally failed to include.

As far as features go, it sticks to the basics, with the ability to bookmark pages, search text, and change the font size and colour. As a basic eReader, Kindle does the trick nicely without many frills attached.


App: iFlow | Developer: BeamItDown | Rating: 2/5
Produced by one of the lesser known developers in the field, iFlow apps come as individual books or collections. So rather than having your library stored together under one neat icon, each title takes up its own space on your browser.

Furthermore, the iFlow range is rather limited, covering primarily classics, and educational texts (philosophy, psychology, etc.). What the iFlow reader does have in its corner, however, is its unique interface.

Utilising the accelerometer, the app scrolls the text along the screen, with the degree of tilting determining the speed of the scrolling. For ease of reading, this this method is by far the most natural. I’ve already gotten through two novels…


App: Stanza | Developer: Lexcycle | Rating: 5/5
When it comes to customisation, Stanza is king. No other app offers the sheer range of options to make your reading experience exactly the way you want it. As well as the basics, Stanza goes a step further- offering almost as much options as a word processor.

Don’t like the line spacing? You can change it. Margins irritating you? No Problem. The somewhat frustrating problem of automatic page rotation is dealt with (why Apple never considered that someone would look at their iPhone while lying down is beyond me), with the ability to lock the page in landscape or portrait mode.
Social networking fans can immediately share what they’re reading through facebook or twitter via a menu of shortcuts which, of course, you can customise.

Arguably its most convenient addition is the concept of assignable hot-keys. The user can designate an action to a particular touch or movement- for example, using the classic pinch and spread motion to adjust font size.

With a wide selection enabling downloads from a variety of eBook retailers, Lexcycle seem to have covered all the bases, providing one of the best eReading apps available. (Lexcycle was acquired by Amazon in 2009)


App: Kobo | Developer: Kobo Books| Rating: 3/5
Kobo opens not with a list of names, but with a bookshelf, providing one of the most visually appealing interfaces of any reading app, and one which lends itself well to browsing multiple titles.

The experience of Kobo holds up well beyond the opening screen, with a number of ways of going from page to page. This seems to be its main area of customisation, with the other options being quite basic (font size, brightness, etc.).

In offering extra page turning options it pushes itself ahead of basic reading apps, but some of these choices are impractical to the degree that they become useless (manual scrolling??). As far as selection is concerned, Kobo fares very well, and once you’ve created a Kobo account you can purchase and download titles directly through the app itself.


App: Marvel Comics | Developer: Marvel | Rating: 4/5
While Dostoyevsky is all well and good, an occasional foray into some lighter eReading might be needed to clear the head. For those moments, there’s a wide selection of comic reading apps available, and Marvel has produced one of the snazziest.

Comics, quite simply, are amazing to read on an iPad. The screen lends itself fabulously to the images, and the technology offers a number of interesting ways to get through the story. For example, this app offers animated transitions, where the panels are displayed one by one, offering a dynamic reading experience well suited to the subject matter.

The app also capitalises on the periodical nature of comic books, offering an update service similar to podcast management, where new issues of subscribed series are automatically downloaded and added to your library. As far as the iPad is concerned, this is one area where the full potential of the medium is explored, and to great effect.


App: ibooks | Developer: Apple | Rating: 4/5
Apple’s own reading app is cosmetically appealing, offering a bookshelf interface similar to Kobo, but endeavors to offer a customisation level similar to Stanza. Unfortunately, it doesn’t quite manage to win out in either category, but provides a solid app with several interesting features nonetheless.

Its actual reading interface is one of the most appealing available, particularly when viewed on the iPad, and provides one of the most generally pleasurable reading experiences. Among its attempts at offering functions beyond the basics, iBooks offers a dictionary, accesible through double tapping a word.

While convenient, the strength of this app lies in its style, and its selection, which offers tens of thousands of titles through Apple’s iBookstore (though the selection for Ireland is currently only Public Domain works, this should change soon).

iPad Goes On Sale In Ireland Friday

Apple’s iPad goes on sale in Ireland and 8 other countries on Friday 23 July.

The base 16GB wi-fi model will be priced at €499 but no further pricing has been released.

Although Irish readers will have access to the iBooks app on the iPad it is unclear if any Irish publishers will have titles available on the device.

However, publishers who have ebooks available through Kobo, Barnes & Noble or Kindle, all of whom have iPad apps will be able t sell ebooks to Irish readers.

Although there is no pre-order ability on Apple’s website the site does suggest that authorised resellers will have units for sale on the day.

The suggested retail price for the Apple iPad are below:
16GB – 32GB – 64GB
€499 – €599 – €699 >> Wi-Fi
€599 – €699 – €799 >> 3G

Apple's iBooks Available In Ireland

iBooksApple‘s iBooks program is now available for download for the iPhone and iPod Touch, but only after users update their iPhone & iPod Touch operating systems to the new iOS4.

Irish readers do not yet have access to paid titles in Apple’s iBookstore, the iTunes for books, but they can download free Project Gutenberg ebooks to the iPod or iPhone and can also read the free Winnie The Pooh ebook that comes pre-loaded in Apple’s iBooks.

Apple announced today that they had sold 3 million units of the new iPad device since it launch 80 days ago. The iPad has not yet been released in Ireland but news on pricing is due and the device is due to go on sale early in July.

There is no word yet from Apple or Irish publishers on what titles and on what basis ebooks will be available on launch of the iPad and iBookstore.

Four of the largest publishers in the UK, Penguin, Macmillan, Hachette UK and HarperCollins had a presence on Apple’s iBookstore when the iPad launched there. They operate an Agency Model whereby the publisher sets the price and pays the seller, in this case Apple, a set commission.

Daily Links 12/05/2010

The Knife Of Never Letting Go, Patrick NessPatrick Ness & Sarah Rees Brennan | Question anyone?
Go on, suggest a question to David for Patrick Ness or Sarah Rees Brennan
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Launch of The Song the Oriole Sang by Philip McDonagh
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Launch of The Summer Campaign in Kerry
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Orion signs Walsh autobiography
The christmas biography market in Ireland is hotting up
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Review: The Fethard-On-Sea Boycott
A pretty fair review I think!
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President Mary McAleese “Books are the stepping stones to your best self.”
The president is a fine speaker.
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The iPad and iBookstore to arrive in UK on 28th May
We must wait until July of course!
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Is There a Digital Talent Emergency in Book Publishing?
Yes if, no but!
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Daily Links 29/03/2010

Galway Arts Centre March Poetry Slam
On for a poetry Slam?
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Publishing Perspectives: Simon Levack
A interesting note on self-publishing and Five Stone Press
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Apple’s iPad may give media executives a chance to make money
I remain a skeptic. Though the rumors are that the company has pre-sold 1 million devices.
Read more…

Return to the Wilde
The Picture of Dorian Gray will be the one city one book for April!
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How love lasted despite divisive faith crusaders
Collins Press’ The Fethard On Sea Boycott gets a review.
Read more…