Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Amazon invents their own holiday – Prime Day

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Black Friday is the most lucrative day of the year for Amazon and this is apparently not enough for them. Christmas is coming early this July with the advent of a new holiday, Prime Day.

Prime Day is a one day shopping extravaganza that will transpire on July 15th 2015. There will be a copious amount of deals that will only be available for Amazon Prime members who have paid the $99.99 per year fee to get free two day shipping and a plethora of other benefits.

The sale promises to drop prices in a slew of categories including video games and electronics.  Members will find deals starting at midnight PDT, with new deals starting throughout the day, as often as every ten minutes.

Offer your users digital magazines and newpapers access fee free for a year

While meeting with our library partners at ALA in San Francisco last week, many were excited to hear about the success of one of our newest products, OverDrive Periodicals. To help spread the word about how libraries can offer digital newspapers and magazines on the same platform as their eBooks and audiobooks, we offered ALA attendees a special offer: sign up for OverDrive PeriodicalsNewspapersDevice by July 10th and don’t pay an access fee for one year.

Given the success of this promotion we’ve decided to extend it to all of our partners. If you contact your Collection Specialist and purchase subscriptions to OverDrive Periodicals, we’ll waive the access fee for twelve months. This will enable you to provide your users over 1,000 popular magazines and newspapers including exclusive content from the Wall Street Journal, USA Today and The Washington Post. Libraries who have added this feature are seeing huge circulation increases with users coming back daily to borrow the latest issues of their favorite periodicals.

Contact your Collection Specialist today for more details on how to start providing this great feature and keep your users coming back to your digital collection day after day. 

OverDrive Periodicals are currently available for public and school libraries in the U.S. only

Remote twerking robot

Dan Aldred, of Pig Love Pi Glove fame, has been working on a new project. He’s been using an Energenie Pi-mote IR sensor board with his Pi to record the signals from a remote control and then transmit these signals back to a device. Why? So that he can control this robot and its (frankly disturbing) twerking from a number of platforms: his Raspberry Pi, Python, Twitter or even a webpage.

The tech’s very clever, Dan, but I’m just unable to get past the fact that the thing appears to have buttocks in certain configurations.

If you want to use your Energenie in a similar fashion, you’ll find typically full and detailed instructions on Dan’s website. We’re big fans of Energenie’s Pi-mote add-on, and there are lots of uses for them outside twerking robots. (I use one at home with an IR sensor to control the lights when we open the front door, because the switch is really stupidly far away when you’re stumbling in the dark; Gordon has one he uses seasonally on his Christmas tree; and Rachel has built one into her home-made sous-vide cooking kit.) All that said, I think this is probably the most entertaining use of one we’ve seen yet – thank you Dan, and more power to your robot’s rear end.

 

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eBooks and The Environment: A Greener Reading Experience

There’s a lot to love about eBooks – they’re portable, can be accessed over the Internet, and they can be shared quickly and conveniently.

Something most people don’t take into consideration when they say they love them, though, is that eBooks can be a greener choice than today’s physical books end up being. With more resources at low enough levels to impact environmental stability and more habitats being destroyed by deforestation and the search for fossil fuels, making even a small choice for a greener life can be important. So when you’re looking for that next little change that can help you have a bigger impact and thinking about switching to eBooks, here’s the rundown of how they help (and maybe even hinder) efforts towards green living.

Printing and Carbon Emissions

The printing press came into use in the mid-15th century and has not gone out of style even today. Mass printing can be done on huge scales now and book publishers routinely release millions of copies of new titles at a time to satisfy market demand. The problem with this method of delivery is the carbon footprint that printing is responsible for.

A carbon footprint is generally defined as the total amount of greenhouse gasses an individual or group is responsible for. Every person on earth has some level of footprint on the carbon register due to carbon dioxide, but beyond that, the impact of carbon emissions from cars, factories, large building construction and other industries is a concern, as it is affecting the quality of air and atmosphere we depend on for existence.

The printing industry has historically had a very high carbon footprint. The harvesting of enough timber to turn into paper alone has a high emission of greenhouse gasses and then considering that this harvesting removes trees that release oxygen that helps balance our own intrinsic carbon footprints, the impact on the environment can be astronomical.

Thankfully, eBooks don’t require trees to be produced or even read. They’re not all green energy, due to the minerals that go into the electronics that most people prefer to read their eBooks on, but because they are meant to be used many times over, their impact is drastically less than that of print books. One eReader can be used to read literally thousands of books and as most of them require a charge once a week or even less, depending on how voracious a reader’s appetite is, eReaders begin to look like the more green approach to reading.

The Internet and eBooks

It’s not a surprise that readers have taken such a shine to eBooks, given their ultimate portability over paper copies, but the real convenience of an ebook is their availability to almost anyone thanks to the Internet. There are hundreds of stores available with just a few button clicks and they offer hundreds of thousands of titles to meet any interest or need.

Online eBooks have helped the popularity of websites like Barnesandnoble.com because they offer a selection of titles for instant access. There’s no need to travel to the store to pick up a copy of the book you’re looking for when you can get it via electronic delivery in just a few seconds. The NOOK online eBooks takes delivery of popular classics and the most anticipated new titles quick and convenient. And many eBooks offer wireless or 3G cellular access to their respective stores so you can shop on the go from anywhere you have a signal.

Reduce, Reuse

When you’re looking to reduce your carbon footprint and you’re a bookworm, an eReader may be the best way to go for all your reading needs; they offer the classics (many of which are available free) and new material, but there are also other ways you can reduce your impact on the environment and still enjoy a good book.

Many publishing companies today have made commitments to greener practices in all areas of their business and recycled materials are now being used more than ever to print physical books but there’s another way to commit to being green and still read a good book.

If the book was published 20 or more years ago and is still around, it’s going to have the lowest carbon footprint of all. That’s the beauty of a good book well cared for and the green movement as a whole. When you seek to reduce your impact on the environment, you normally look to reuse as much as possible. Books make it easy to find something truly special, even if the cover is a bit worn or faded.

Conclusion

If you’re looking for a way to lower your impact on the environment, an old book is a good place to start. They’re readily available everywhere from thrift stores to second hand bookshops and have a very low carbon footprint, but if you’re a truly voracious reader and want to keep up on all the current titles coming to the market, an eReader allows you to tote around hundreds of good books in a tiny package and because it’s meant to be reused over and over again, it offers a modern take on a problem that’s already been around for some time. Invest in an eReader and get good books online, anytime, anywhere.