Category: Tablet

Digital Publishing Headlines

Digital Book World offers five reasons why the global eBook marketplace registered huge growth in 2013. The World Bulletin says that the eBook Revolution is about to surge in Turkey. Talking New Media reports that Thin Reads has released its eBook singles best-seller list for 2013. Booktrade posted that Russia is now the third biggest …

Continue reading

Barnes and Noble reports a decline in revenue over holiday season.

Deadline posted on Barnes and Noble marking a decline in revenue over the holiday season, with a real drop felt by its Nook devices.

Not on my bookshelf…

Here’s an interesting story at Time on how digital publishing allows perfectly normal human curiosity to peruse a thousand shades of crazy that you’d never be caught dead reading.

Digital publishing evolves in 2014

Gigaom posted its thoughts on the evolution of digital publishing in 2014.

Digital Publishing Headlines

The Huffington Post offers its exclusive 2014 eBook singles wishlist. The New Yorker wonders what Apple hopes to gain by continuing its eBook fight. Salon talks about the paper book becoming a luxury item. GoodeReader tells us how to use the Barnes and Noble Nook HD or HD+ outside the US.

Change coming to the eBook Revolution

EContent starts the year off with an interesting piece that speculates on some of the changes we might see as the eBook Revolution continues to evolve.

Top 10 eBook stories for 2013

Digital Book World has posted its top ten eBook stories for 2013.

eBook Revolution predictions for 2014

Forbes offers more predictions for the eBook Revolution in 2014.

Digital Publishing Update

Mediashift lists the top 10 eBook trends of 2013. Digital Book World has the best-selling eBooks of 2013. The Flurry Blog reports a rise in Amazon’s Kindle activations on Christmas day. (63% increase over an average day.) The Mac Observer swaps its Apple Retina iPad for a week with a Kindle Fire HDX.

Focus on eBook reading data

GoodeReader reports on eBook subscription service start-ups like Oyster and Scribd that plan to focus on eBook reading data.