Google To Launch Play Textbooks In August, Partners With 5 Major Publishing Houses | TechCrunch


Google To Launch Play Textbooks In August, Partners With 5 Major Publishing Houses | TechCrunch

The company has partnered with five major textbook publishers to launch this service. These partners are Pearson, Wiley, Macmillian Higher Education, McGraw-Hill and Cengage Learning. Google says it will have a “comprehensive selection” of textbooks from these publishers in the store that will cover subjects like law, math and accounting, but it did not announce exact numbers.

15 Cool Ways Libraries Can Use Vine to Create Social Videos – OEDB.org


Vine is a new social video application that will let you create and share short and sweet 6-second videos that loop.  This exciting free app is available for both iOS and Android devices.  And libraries have already begun adopting this popular new format.  If you’re wondering what can be accomplished in a 6-second video, here are some ideas for ways libraries can use Vine videos…15 Cool Ways Libraries Can Use Vine to Create Social Videos – OEDB.org.

There Are Plenty of Women in Tech, You Just Haven’t Noticed | PCMag.com


Quotable: “The reason most people don’t know there are many women who sleep, eat, and breathe tech is because these aren’t the women most acknowledged in and by the tech industry, especially the men.”

See the full article: There Are Plenty of Women in Tech, You Just Haven’t Noticed | PCMag.com.

BBC News – Google launches Chromecast low-cost TV dongle


Google has announced a low-cost competitor to Apple TV – a “dongle” device called Chromecast.

The dongle is plugged into a television’s HDMI port, and allows users to stream media from smartphones, tablets and computers.

Launching immediately in the US, the device will cost $35 (£23). There is as yet no word on international launches.

via BBC News – Google launches Chromecast low-cost TV dongle.

Amazon vs. your public library | Fortune Tech


I’m posting this but its not really new ‘news’ for libraries.

See the full article: Amazon vs. your public library | Fortune Tech.

Could Amazon (AMZN), tech’s behemoth retailer, really be threatened by the neighborhood library — a centuries-old institution known for musty shelves, high school cram sessions, and “Shhhhhh. Quiet please?” The answer is complex. Much hinges on whether libraries and publishers can iron out differences that have limited the selection of e-books available for lending.

BookVibe spies on social media to recommend reads | Crave – CNET


A new service scrapes your social network for books worth your time.

via BookVibe spies on social media to recommend reads | Crave – CNET.

BookVibe

SEO is dead. Long live social media optimisation | Technology | guardian.co.uk


SEO is dead. Long live social media optimisation | Technology | guardian.co.uk.

Quotable: “A better model for today’s businesses is to consider what it means to be social-media optimised, with a focus on customer-centric interaction rather than merely setting up a web property in the hope that Google will deliver hits. Recommendations from friends count for more than a search engine algorithm will ever achieve.”

The State of Digital Rights: A Discussion | Mashable


For the past few weeks, Mashable has been crowdsourcing a Digital Bill of Rights to highlight the digital freedoms and protections our readers feel each user should be guaranteed as a citizen of the Internet.

After hundreds of comments and contributions on the Google Doc and through social media, a Digital Bill of Rights by the Internet, for the Internet, has been created. The document, though, is a work in progress as more users from across the world continue to include their thoughts and additions to it.

via The State of Digital Rights: A Discussion | Mashable.

The World’s Biggest Data Breaches in One Stunning Visualization | Mashable


The World’s Biggest Data Breaches in One Stunning Visualization | Mashable.

See the entire data visualization at Information is Beautiful.

Data Breaches

Jonathan Zittrain: ‘Digital books are under the control of distributors rather than readers’ (Wired UK)


Digital books and other texts are increasingly coming under the control of distributors and other gatekeepers rather than readers and libraries. Though you can read a book through, say, Google Books, or on a Nook or Kindle, it’s laborious to save what you see to your computer and truly make the book your own. With cloud-based services, one “master” copy of the book is always online, but that makes it vulnerable to manipulation or even deletion.

Quotable: “To meet these challenges, libraries should be given an opportunity to escrow copies of publicly available but still all-too-controllable texts. They can compare their own banked copies with what’s currently on offer to the public, looking for changes to the integrity of texts.”

See the full article: Jonathan Zittrain: ‘Digital books are under the control of distributors rather than readers’ (Wired UK).