Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

The Cost of EBooks

NEW YORK - OCTOBER 20:  The new 'nook' digital reader is displayed at a launching  October 20, 2009 in New York City. The 'nook' is a wireless reader which will be available on Barnes & Noble's Web site and in stores and is currently available for 'pre-order' for $259. The 'nook' is less than 5 inches wide and 8 inches tall and weighs 11.2 ounces. At $259 it will be the same price as the recently reduced Kindle by Amazon.  (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Like many others, I thought books for the Kindle would be dirt cheap. Five dollars or less--after all, no paper, shipping, store costs, etc. Wrong!


According to the September 2010 Wired Magazine's "Burning Question" column--which I can't find online--those costs account for a paltry 15% of book prices. The other 85% is taken by authors, editors, designers, marketers, publicists, distributors and resellers. And all but the last two (and I'm not so sure about distributors) are still necessary to effectively sell ebooks.


In addition, an ebook needs antipiracy software, programmers to adapt each text to different platforms, and extra legal support (not sure what that entails). Another less obvious reason for slightly higher-than-necessary prices comes from Larry Doyle: Publishers are "concerned about devaluing people's perception of books."


Hmm. Don't know if I agree but I never pass up an opportunity to quote a Doyle. That was my grandmother's family name.


However, Rick Broida--the author of this Wired article--goes on to point out that authors can eliminate all those middlemen and publish their tomes on Amazon. Amazon lets authors take 35%, an unheard-of cut...but wait! Apple ibooks will let authors keep 70% of sales--70% !!!


I assume that means, though, that the author has to put out money in advance for professional editing and cover art and design. I assume too that all publicity is the author's responsibility, so s/he will probably have to pay for a publicist, travel, promotional items, ads.


So stay tuned. I doubt that we'll be downloading $4.99 thrillers any time soon.


Source: http://alotofgaul.blogspot.com/2010/08/cost-of-ebooks.html

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Sunday, August 22, 2010

And So It Begins (Again)

I oftentimes quip to others that I'm a sad, sad geek with no life. Those others tend to nod their head sagely in agreement with me that I am indeed a sad, sad geek with no life. However, it stands to imagine that I am perhaps the busiest geek with no life in existence. After all, how else can I explain the fact that I've been doing so many things that only now, after the ninth day of the school year, do I actually have time to make a blog post.


To sum up my summer activities, I essentially killed myself going to class every day in order to finish my teaching certificate a year early. It wasn't all grueling work, as I spent my June class ignoring what the professor said as I watched the World Cup during class. Having said that, taking classes meant I had to miss the summer camp I usually work at (The last time I missed was in 1997... back when I attended as a camper) as well as the MLS All-Star Game which was held next door in Houston. I was a bit bummed to miss it, but I made up for it by seeing Theirry Henry's debut in MLS that next weekend... after the end of classes.


When I wasn't in class churning out gristle in the form of writing assignments, I was feverishly trying to land a very nice science position at an elementary school here in New Iberia at a school that's generally regarded as the best elementary school in the parish. I chased the job down, and finally got an interview. I blew the interview away as only I could, but was passed over for the other person who interviewed--a lady who came in with a single-page resume and not really dressed for the occasion.


That obviously meant that I'm back at my school teaching Reading. I can't say I'm 100% thrilled about it, but this year is off to a bit of a flyer. The kids are well-behaved, the Promethean gadgets are all up and running, and even my struggling students are happy to be in class. Harry Wong would be happy with me as I leave at the end of the day full of energy, whereas my kids are a bit worn out from a long day's work. And that's a good thing, as I'm our Seventh Grade Team Leader, on our school's School Improvement Plan Committee, our school's Technology Lead Teacher, and most important to me, I start the road to my Master's Degree in Education of the Gifted. Needless to say this year will be packed to the gills, so that means there will be plenty for me to opine. As it stands, this semester looks to allow for a Monday-Thursday-Friday/Weekend posting format, so that's how posting will be for the time being. Feel free to drop a line and give your opinion on matters. Otherwise it'll look like I'm sitting here on my lonely online perch whining about the world--which isn't why I blog.


Until next time.

Source: http://teachingonmars.blogspot.com/2010/08/and-so-it-begins-again.html

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Monday, August 16, 2010

How do u get vidos on ur myspace from utube?

copy the embed code from the youtube video (if its avaible) and paste to to where ever you want on your myspace.


How do u get vidos on ur myspace from utube?
Copy the emmed code into your clipboard then the next time you update your myspace paste i into you HTML source.


Then post your post and whaala.


You just put your youtube video on your myspace


Bye
Reply:i thought u're asking how to get a video file from utube or myspace


here's my solution


Go to the C:Documents and Settings .... \Temporary Internet Files folder there you can find some 10 - 25 mb files named get_video[1] ... something like that thats the temporary saved videos to your hard disk. just copy them and convert and play
Reply:You go to YouTube then go over on the right side where the big grey box is. Then you copy the embed code [if it is not there click the tiny text which is in blue that says more info] and find the embed code there! Then you switch over to Myspace and paste the code in which ever section you want. Make sure to save =D


Hope this helps!


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Should a twelve year old girl be allowed to access Utube?

Also is there a way to block some of its content but not other . For example allow popular music videos, but not explicit ones?


Should a twelve year old girl be allowed to access Utube?
i have an account and the only let you see "adult" videos if your D.O.B = over 18 so if you let her have an account and make sure her D.O.B is her real birthday she cant access those videos. you cant access those video's without a account anyway. also those video's are never porn or really rude things. some have a little swearing but nothing much (but i haven't really gone looking for that type of thing so I'm not 100% that there could be something worse on youTube)
Reply:Call me paranoid, but I wouldn't allow a twelve year old to have access to Youtube without parental control. There are many explicit and inappropriate videos on Youtube, videos that include sexual acts or nudity, all of which a twelve year old should not have access to.


If you are contemplating on whether you should allow your twelve year old child to access Youtube, you should make an account and use her actual year of birth, that way all uncensored videos will not be able to be viewed/accessible. The inappropriate videos can only be viewed if the member is over the age of 18, so instead, when signing up and becoming a member, write her actual year of birth, which should be 1996.


It's always best to control your child and to give consent only when you are aware of what she is viewing. Placing the computer in the living room or in an open area of the house will also increase prevention, that way you know what is being viewed (unless you want to check the history). Good luck!
Reply:i know you're worried about what she sees on the internet and thats a good thing, but even if she doesnt see it on the internet, it's always still going to be talked of in schools and between social gatherings with friends. My uncle is a preacher and he tried everything he could to shield his son from that type of stuff but it didnt work out because of other children. They will eventually know this stuff and you might not know if they do. I learned about sex when i was 11 from my mom. In my opinion, instead of shielding pre-teens or teens from this stuff, parents should have more conversations with them about it and things they should do to protect themselves, or things that are right or wrong about it. Knowledge is Power
Reply:Keep the computer in a common room in the house, like the living room and when possible be involved with the 12 year old in what she is looking for and looking at. Share her interest and use that as a way to guide her away from things you feel she is not ready for.
Reply:yes as long as you have parental controls set at medium and they cant find porn, check your history every week and your google search history, find out what they watch
Reply:Yeah, as long as you're careful. Some videos say uncensored, just stay away from those I guess.
Reply:The vids are blocked anyway. I'm 13 and I'm always on it, my parents don't really care.
Reply:just make an account for her that is under 18 so that way she can't acces those videos it would say she is too young
Reply:no I am 12 and I think you tube is horrible and dangerous
Reply:YES.


youtube isnt a bad site
Reply:yea
Reply:some things
Reply:yes. there isnt nudity on youtube or anything. trust your 12 year old.


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Story of a hospitality worker losing his cool

flight attendant arguing with customer
then activates the emergency-evacuation chute!


It has been a long time since flight attendant was a glamorous job title. The hours are long. Passengers with feelings of entitlement bump up against new no-frills policies. Babies scream. Security precautions grate but must be enforced. Airlines demand lightning-quick turnarounds, so attendants herd passengers and collect trash with the grim speed of an Indy pit crew. Everyone, it seems, is in a bad mood.


On Monday, on the tarmac at Kennedy International Airport, a JetBlue attendant named Steven Slater decided he had had enough, the authorities said.


After a dispute with a passenger who stood to fetch luggage too soon on a full flight just in from Pittsburgh, Mr. Slater, 38 and a career flight attendant, got on the public-address intercom and let loose a string of invective.


Then, the authorities said, he pulled the lever that activates the emergency-evacuation chute and slid down, making a dramatic exit not only from the plane but, one imagines, also from his airline career.


On his way out the door, he paused to grab a beer from the beverage cart. Then he ran to the employee parking lot and drove off, the authorities said.


He was arrested at his home in Belle Harbor, Queens, a few miles from the airport, and charged with felony counts of criminal mischief and reckless endangerment.


“When they hit that emergency chute, it drops down quickly within seconds,” a law enforcement official said. “If someone was on the ground and it came down without warning, someone could be injured or killed.”


In a statement, JetBlue said it was working with the Federal Aviation Administration and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey to investigate the episode. “At no time was the security or safety of our customers or crew members at risk,” the company said.


According to his online profiles, Mr. Slater has been the leader of JetBlue’s uniform redesign committee and a member of the airline’s in-flight values committee. Neighbors in California, where Mr. Slater grew up, said he had recently been caring for his dying mother, a retired flight attendant, and had done the same for his father, a pilot.


The contretemps on Monday unfolded as JetBlue Flight 1052, a regional Embraer 190 jet, landed at Kennedy around noon — on time — with 100 passengers aboard and pulled up to the gate, said another law enforcement official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the investigation was continuing.


The official offered the following account:


One passenger stood up to retrieve belongings from the overhead compartment before the crew had given permission. Mr. Slater instructed the person to remain seated. The passenger defied him. Mr. Slater reached the passenger just as the person was pulling down the luggage, which struck Mr. Slater in the head.


Mr. Slater asked for an apology. The passenger instead cursed at him. Mr. Slater got on the plane’s public-address system and cursed out the passenger for all to hear. Then, after declaring that 20 years in the airline industry was enough, he blurted out, “It’s been great!” He activated the inflatable evacuation slide at a service exit and left the world of flight attending behind.


In short order, his brick two-story house on Beach 128th Street in the Rockaways, just off the ocean, was swarmed by detectives and uniformed officers from New York City and the Port Authority. “It was like there was a hostage in there,” said Curt Krakowski, who was working on the deck of a house across the street.


Mr. Slater, Mr. Krakowski said, “had a smile on his face when the cops brought him out, like, ‘Yeah, big deal.’ ” Mr. Slater was taken to a Port Authority police building at the airport and was expected to be held overnight.


One person familiar with the investigation said JetBlue took more than 20 minutes to notify the Port Authority police, allowing Mr. Slater time to get home. A spokesman for the airline declined to comment when asked about the delay, and a Port Authority spokesman said, “In matters of criminality, the Port Authority Police Department should be notified immediately.”


The episode is the latest round in what is seen as an increasingly hostile relationship between airlines and passengers.


A few weeks ago, an Air France flight attendant was arrested for stealing the wallets of first-class passengers. Last year, a Canadian singer parodied United Airlines on YouTube in a series of songs about how the airline broke his guitar.


A new study by the International Air Transport Association found an increase in instances of disgruntled passengers and violence on planes, with the chief cause being passengers who refuse to obey safety orders. By the same token, frequent-flier blogs echo with tales of “flight attendant rage.”


While JetBlue’s flight attendants are not unionized, a spokeswoman for the Association of Flight Attendants, Corey Caldwell, said anxieties were common on planes. “Anyone who has traveled since Sept. 11 understands that being in the cabin is stressful these days,” Ms. Caldwell said.


The portrait of Mr. Slater that emerges from interviews with neighbors and friends and from profiles on MySpace, Facebook and LinkedIn shows a man with mixed feelings about his job.


Photographs show him in the mountains of El Yunque National Forest in Puerto Rico and sitting behind the wheel of a convertible. “Steven Slater has visited 22 percent of the countries in the world!” the MySpace page announces.


Yes, and Pittsburgh, too. “Chances are I am flying 35,000 feet somewhere over the rainbow on my way to some semifabulous JetBlue Airways destination!” the MySpace page says. “Truly, some are better than others. But I am enjoying being back in the skies and seeing them all.”


A former roommate, John Rochelle, said Mr. Slater was seldom home. When Mr. Slater was not working, Mr. Rochelle said, he was usually in Thousand Oaks, Calif., a Los Angeles suburb, caring for his sick mother.


A neighbor there, Ron Franz, said Mr. Slater also cared for his father as he was dying from Lou Gehrig’s disease. Mr. Franz, 72, was hard-pressed to explain Mr. Slater’s actions on Monday. “It could be the pressure of his mother’s illness, because that’s not the type of behavior or conduct that Steve exhibits,” he said. “He’s a very conscientious, responsible individual.”


But a former flight attendant, Janet Bavasso, who lives next door to Mr. Slater in Queens, found nothing mysterious at all.


“Enough is enough — good for him,” Ms. Bavasso said. “If he would have called me, I would have picked him up.”


Source:
New York Times

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Monday, August 9, 2010

Voices

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