Google has just filed for a new patent that would make eBooks come alive with sounds. The sounds would be triggered by events within the book, lapping waves, an ominous crescendo or maybe an outdoor market. The new application would have the sounds stored on a server and would be pushed out to the eBook you are reading at the time. Here is a bit from the patent application that outlines the main abstract. “Trigger point information is generated for an eBook to play sounds in an eBook. A request for trigger point information is received from a client. The eBook is analyzed to determine trigger point information for the eBook. The trigger point information includes location information identifying a location of a trigger point in the eBook. The trigger information also includes sound information indicating a sound to play at the trigger point. The determined trigger point information is transmitted to the client in response to the request for trigger point information. The client is configured to track a user’s reading location in the eBook and play the sound indicated by the sound information responsive to the user reading the eBook at the location of the trigger point. I could really see Text to Speech benefiting from this new patent. Many e-Reading apps from Kobo, Amazon and Barnes and Noble don’t support it and if you have vision problems, you may want the book to be read aloud. Instead of purchasing an audiobook at 3 to 6 times the cost of a normal eBook, you might see new functionality added to apps that will allow people to take advantage of TTS. The one sector this new technology may excel at is kids books. Most enhanced books right now have all sorts of interactive elements and a narrated reading experience. The Guardian ran a focus group recently that found out “Children reading enhanced ebooks also “recalled significantly fewer narrative details than children who read the print version of the same story”, said the researchers, speculating that the extra features may be distracting. interaction”. The fact that you can extenuate very specific narratives or sound effects, without using “interactivity” as a crutch and core selling point, is very compelling. Google Submits New Patent for Triggered Sounds in eBooks is a post from: E-Reader News |
A Semi-automated Technology Roundup Provided by Linebaugh Public Library IT Staff | techblog.linebaugh.org
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
Google Submits New Patent for Triggered Sounds in eBooks
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