March 21, 2010 say something

e-Book formats or HTML?

So Mark Boulton decided to release his book, A Practical Guide to Designing for the Web, online and without cost. It’s not the only web design book available for free on the web, which this list and a previous encounter with two other online books prove, but all of them make me wonder, again, about the electronic book format.

In the examples above, said “books” don’t adapt official e-book formats, but stick with plain old semantic HTML and PDFs. Joe Clark, in an A List Apart article, explains that both standard and proprietary e-book formats are just more specialized versions of HTML/XHTML, so is there anything gravely wrong with creating webpages instead of actual e-book files?

As one who knows her way around HTML, taking an extra step into e-books (e.g. ePub) feels clunky and unnecessary. However, that is hasty judgment without first considering factors like audience. For web design books, perhaps it makes more sense to not bother with anything else and keep them as webpages because web designers work on sites all day long. That’s not to say they wouldn’t enjoy reading web design books in their e-book readers, but they may mind less having a book in one tab alongside other web design resources in other tabs.

Using proper formats also seems like a natural extension of web standards philosophy. If one were to publish a book online, why not go for the suitable format? There are scripts, extensions, and converters available. And with the ePub Zen Garden following in the steps of the CSS one, it may become the next worthy cause to root for.

February 11, 2009 one reply

Donate to Australian bushfire victims by buying SitePoint eBooks

Here’s a great deal you don’t see everyday: SitePoint is letting you purchase 5 e-books for the price of 1 (that’s $29.95) and one hundred percent of the proceeds will be donated to the victims of the bushfires in Australia.

So we’re taking one day, working around the clock to plan, package, and execute our best book deal ever in order to raise funds for the Red Cross as soon as possible. Our ambitious plan is to raise over US$50,000. Every single cent generated from this promotion will go directly to the bushfire relief effort—so if you spend $29.95 purchasing 5 books from SitePoint, the whole $29.95 will go directly to supporting this cause. We feel that’s the least we can do.

The bushfires have already taken hundreds of lives just these past few days. But admirably enough, the SitePoint folks have come up with this selfless deed and at the same time managed to reward others who contribute to it. All in record time—this promo launched only a few hours ago.

It helps that digital products like e-books (and other downloadbles like songs and movies) cost practically nothing to distrbute. Of course one would rather leaf through real paper in a book, but getting hold of the information contained in the book matters more.

More importantly you’re donating to charity and getting rewarded for it. And unlike other products, all of the proceeds go straight to the victims. Not just a fraction. Which means you don’t even have to be interested in the books they’re selling; you can always find someone else who is.

So the customers get books, the victims get help, and SitePoint gets what, exactly? The satisfaction that it’s helping people in deep trouble. And, eventually, the reputation that it’s that kind of company. And knowing that, wouldn’t you want to do business with them again?

The offer ends on February 13. Buy now!

(Disclaimer: I’m not being paid by SitePoint to write this.)

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