[bookport] Re: Libraries Offering Audiobook Downloads

  • From: "mickey" <micka@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <bookport@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 29 Aug 2005 15:01:55 -0400

MessageYou're right about Overdrive not being played on BookPort, but it can be 
used on the computer.

I tried etexts, which seem to be graphic only, and couldn't get anything from 
them on the computer. I haven't tried BookPort, but doubt if they will work.

Mickey

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Kramlinger, Keith G., M.D. 
  To: 'bookport@xxxxxxxxxxxxx' 
  Sent: Monday, August 29, 2005 2:21 PM
  Subject: [bookport] Re: Libraries Offering Audiobook Downloads


  Thanks, Neal.

   

  Our local library offers this service but I haven't yet tried it.

   

  My understanding is that Overdrive, the required software for this audiobook 
service, is Windows Media Player based. Given that Bookport doesn't (yet) work 
with WMA files, I'm guessing Bookport users will not be able to access 
audiobooks from this source. Can this be confirmed by anyone knowledgeable 
about this?

   

  Also, our library offers ebook downloads in the Adobe Reader format. Can 
these be made accessible to Bookport?

   

  Below is information for our local library site, in case that may help.

   

  Digital books are the digital versions of print books, and include 
downloadable audio books for listening and eBooks for on-screen reading. Both 
digital audio books and eBooks can be used on a variety of devices such as PCs, 
laptops, and supported PDAs. This site offers digital audio books in the 
OverDrive Media Console(tm) format, and eBooks in the Adobe® Reader® format

   

  To use OverDrive Media Console, you will need to have Windows Media Player (9 
Series or newer). OverDrive Media Console takes advantage of Windows Media 
Player support for burning audio books to CD and transferring files to 
supported portable devices. To review a complete and current list of supported 
portable devices, click here.

   

  For the latest information on Adobe Reader, click here to visit the Adobe 
Reader product page at Adobe.com.

   

  Thanks for any help.

   


------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  From: bookport-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:bookport-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On 
Behalf Of Neal Ewers
  Sent: Monday, August 29, 2005 10:27 AM
  To: Bookport
  Subject: [bookport] Libraries Offering Audiobook Downloads

   

  Libraries Offering Audiobook Downloads

  Associated Press

  Aug 25, 2005 2:35 PM (ET)

  By MICHAEL HILL

  http://apnews.myway.com//article/20050825/D8C70V582.html

   

  GUILDERLAND, N.Y. (AP) - A new way to borrow audiobooks from the library

  involves no CDs, no car trips, no fines and no risk of being shushed. 

  Rather, public libraries from New York City to Alameda, Calif., are letting 

  patrons download Tom Clancy techno-thrillers, Arabic tutorials and other

  titles to which they can listen on their computers or portable music 

  players - all without leaving home.

  Librarians say such offerings help libraries stay relevant in the digital age.

  Barbara Nichols Randall, director of the Guilderland Public Library in 

  suburban Albany, said the library considered the needs of younger readers 

  and those too busy to visit.

  "This is a way for us to have library access 24/7," she said.

  (AP) Visitors to the audiobook section of the Guilderland Public Library in 

  Guilderland, N.Y., on...

  Full Image

  There's still one big hitch, though: The leading library services offer 

  Windows-friendly audiobook files that can't be played on Apple Computer 

  Inc. (AAPL)'s massively popular iPod player.

  Vendors such as OverDrive Inc. and OCLC Online Computer Library Center 

  Inc.'s NetLibrary have licensing deals with publishers and provide digital 

  books using Microsoft Corp. (MSFT)'s Windows Media Audio format, which 

  includes copyright protections designed to help audiobooks stand apart from 

  the often lawless world of song swapping.

  A patron with a valid library card visits a library Web site to borrow a

  title for, say, three weeks. When the audiobook is due, the patron must 

  renew it or find it automatically "returned" in a virtual sense: The file 

  still sits on the patron's computer, but encryption makes it unplayable 

  beyond the borrowing period.

  "The patron doesn't have to do anything after the lending period," said 

  Steve Potash, chief executive of OverDrive. "The file expires. It checks

  itself back into the collection. There's no parts to lose. It's never 

  damaged. It can never be late."

  Potash said about 1,000 libraries have signed up for OverDrive's audiobook 

  service since its debut late last year. NetLibrary, teaming up with 

  Recorded Books, launched a similar service in January and counts 200 

  library customers.

  Libraries offering audiobook downloads range from large institutions in New 

  York and Los Angeles to smaller ones for Cleveland, Ohio, Maricopa County, 

  Ariz., North Little Rock, Ark. and Omaha, Neb. The Hawaii State Public 

  Library System signed up earlier this month.

  Guilderland pays NetLibrary about $6,000 a year for more than 850 titles. 

  Randall considers that a good deal, noting that a single audiobook can cost 

  the library up to $80 when bought on CD.

  Under the NetLibrary program, Guilderland gets a set number of downloads

  for all titles each year, and a single title can be borrowed by multiple

  patrons simultaneously as long as the cap hasn't been reached. Downloads

  over the cap cost extra. Patrons must provide their own audio players, 

  although they may listen on their home computers if they do not have one.

  Other libraries make different arrangements. OverDrive, for example, 

  generally takes a more traditional approach. When a copy is checked out, no 

  other patron may download it until the borrowing period ends.

  It's still unclear what impact such services will have on audiobook 

  download sales from companies such as Audible Inc. (ADBL), although one 

  analyst suggested it could inspire more sales as patrons buy for keeps a

  title they had borrowed.

  "It's certainly smart for the publishers to do this," said Phil Leigh, a

  senior analyst with Inside Digital Media.

  Digital downloads are a part of a natural progression for libraries, which 

  have evolved from lending books to cassettes and videotapes to CDs and 

  DVDs. OverDrive recently launched a video download service for libraries.

  Librarians say they had little interest in audiobook downloads just a few 

  years ago, but they have since noticed what everyone else has: the ubiquity 

  of people sporting earbuds on streets, buses and malls.

  Nearly 28 million portable audio players were sold last year, according to 

  In-Stat, a technology research company. With more than 21 million sold, the 

  iPod remains the signature portable player. But it uses the Advanced Audio 

  Coding format with FairPlay, its own digital rights management system and 

  one incompatible with Windows' technology.

  Just as the lack of a standard digital audio format has fragmented the 

  music download market, it affects audiobooks.

  Users of iPods can still listen to books purchased through sources such as 

  audible.com or Apple's own iTunes Music Store, but the library services,

  for now, are geared toward computers and devices that support Windows Media 

  Audio files. OverDrive files can be burned to CDs and converted to iPod 

  friendly formats, but NetLibrary's cannot.

  Marge Gammon of NetLibrary said that despite iPod's cache, the company 

  wanted a product that could be played on a range of devices. OverDrive's

  Potash notes there's a growing market of portable audio players, some 

  priced lower then $50 (Regular iPod models start at $299, though the Minis 

  start at $199 and Shuffles at $99).

  Apple spokeswoman Natalie Kerris said the company has no plans to change

  its copy-protection formats and would not comment on the incompatibility 
issue.

  Librarians say they have heard complaints from iPod users, but there's 

  little they can do beyond waiting for the industry to sort out its 
differences.

  One California library shunned the download services completely, largely

  because of iPod's popularity. Instead, Newport Beach Public Library bought 

  15 iPod Shuffles and loaded them up with audiobooks from iTunes to loan 

  out. Patrons are liable for any loss or damage, though librarian Genesis

  Hansen said there's been no problems so far.

  ---

  On the Net:

  OverDrive's library service: http://dlrinc.com

  NetLibrary: http://netlibrary.com

   

  Neal Ewers
  Trace Research and Development Center
  608-263-5485
  ewers@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
  http://www.trace.wisc.edu 

   



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