Friday, November 28

Free eBooks and Audio Books


If you're a gadget fan and enjoy being able to read a book on your iPhone, Palm Pilot, etc, then you owe it to yourself to check out http://manybooks.net/ There are thousands of free eBooks available for a lot of format choices, including Kindle, eReader, PDF, Mobipocket, Plucker, iSolo, and about twenty more. They're all public domain so they're free, but you'll find tons of books that you want to read if you look around. The "special collections" link has a list of "books to read before you die" if you need some ideas. I found several classics that I had thought about buying, and have expanded to a full library through the afternoon. I only stopped so I could actually read one of them.

You can get a program to view eBooks on your computer at http://www.ereader.com/ereader/software/browse.htm

If you use the eReader software for the iPhone, you need to click the "+" sign on your bookshelf screen, and choose "manybooks.net." It will download the book directly to your iPhone bookshelf. I don't know a way to transfer them from the PC, but they only take about three seconds to download on the phone, so I don't think it could get any easier.



Reading not your thing? Still want to enjoy a book? How about an audio book? "Too expensive," you say? Well, what if a bunch of people volunteer to read to you? That's what you get on http://librivox.org/ The file format seems to be MP3 and Ogg Vorbis for the ones I checked out. Be prepared for big downloads, though. You can get each part seperately, or look for the "entire book in zip format" link to get it all at once. If you're really bored or feeling altruistic, you can record yourself reading a part of a book and upload it for others to download. It's limited to public domain, though. Check the instructions on the website before you spend your day in your recording studio. (The manybooks.net site actually has a collection of books in a category called "Audible" that all have links to librivox.org so you can get the eBook and the Audio version.)


Of course, if you don't already know, most libraries allow you to check out eBooks and audio books from their web pages that expire after a certain amount of time. It is definitely worth it to get the latest book without paying a ton, as long as you don't feel the need to fill your own library.

I also haven't scratched the surface of Project Gutenburg (http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page) or the Google Book Search (http://books.google.com/). There are a ton of ways to get books for free, even if you don't want to leave your house to go to the library. It might motivate you to go check that building out again actually, when you start realizing how much money you're saving! Especially after shelling out the money for that iPhone!

Saturday, November 22

Free Magazine Subscriptions


Right now you can go to the website http://goreadgreen.com/ and get a free 1 year subscription to one of many magazines in a digital format. You read it online or in a downloadable viewer through Zinio where you usually have to pay full price for the subscriptions.

The magazines look great, and have clickable links in the table of contents to take you straight to the page you want to go to.

You can actually get one magazine per unique e-mail address, and all the magazines I got all opened in my one Zinio account. You get an e-mail each month when the next edition is available for you to view/download.

This is an amazing deal! It's too cool not to share!

Monday, November 17

Google voice search


Google usually makes some really cool things, and this one is no different. This really only helps the iPhone users, but is really awesome. Today, instead of trying to type "notary public" on a touch screen while driving and trying to hold the phone by the same screen, I could have just held the phone to my ear and said "notary public" and gotten the same results. Since driving and talking on a phone is illegal here, I could get a ticket, but I can easily say it wasn't a phone call, I was surfing the web.

Official Google page here:
(http://www.google.com/mobile/apple/app.html)

Saturday, November 15

Perpetual fetch machine

Who's smarter? The guy who built the machine or the dog who operates it?

Tuesday, November 4

"What do we do now?" :)

I just thought it was funny. No political message here. More of a "what do Americans rally on now" point of view. I say we focus on Thanksgiving, then Christmas, in that order.

Sunday, November 2

The Matrix beta test

The Matrix . . . Ghost in the Shell . . . Neuromancer . . . whichever story you name, they all start at least something like this . . .


Watch CBS Videos Online

The full article is HERE. The video is amazing. It is really crazy what they've been able to develop and how close they are to helping people who are trapped in their bodies with no way to interact with the world.