Quantcast
PC World: Technology Advice You Can Trust
Find a Review
Free Newsletters
Receive the latest reviews, how-to's, news, and more.
Weekly Brief
Daily Downloads
Daily Technology News
WiFi Finder
Locate wireless services by a specific address, city, state, country, airport, or zip code.
RSS Feeds
Get our latest content via convenient RSS feeds.
Latest News
Today @ PC World
Become a PCW Member
Join the community and start enjoying the benefits:
  • Get tech advice from thousands of PC World Members
  • Rate and recommend the latest tech products
  • Share your thoughts in blog and article comments
  • Get free excerpts and exclusive discounts on Super Guides
Read More About: Topics

Electronic Books for All

Glassbook will offer a standard way to download e-books from bookstores or libraries.

James A. Martin, special to PC World

Friday, May 07, 1999 12:00 AM PDT
Recommend this story?
Want to check out Gone with the Wind from the library? No problem. Just click to your library's Web site, download the Civil War saga onto your subnotebook computer, and take it along to read on the plane. When the two-week lending period is up, just transmit the electronic book back to the library.

That's one of many scenarios that could come true if a new e-book technology takes hold. Acton, Massachusetts-based Glassbook has announced that it has developed and will market an e-book standard for the Internet.

Electronic Book Exchange (known as EBX) is a comprehensive e-book standard developed for book publishers, sellers, distributors, libraries, and consumers alike, according to Richard Price, Glassbook spokesperson.

Open-Book Standard

EBX supports both Microsoft's Open eBook format (which incorporates HTML) and Adobe Systems' Portable Document Format.

Because EBX is based on open standards, the technology will make it possible for consumers to download e-books for viewing on a variety of devices such as a Glassbook reader, desktop PC, or Windows CE handheld computer, Price says.

By comparison, existing e-book systems today are built primarily on proprietary technologies, which restricts their users to viewing only those e-books designed to run on that particular device.

In addition, EBX incorporates e-commerce standards, enabling bookstores to have kiosks for downloading EBX-compliant e-books or offer them from their Web site.

The EBX standard also includes copyright-protection encryption, preventing unauthorized book duplication and distribution. You would be able to copy only a page or two from an e-book, as is the case with a paperbound book. And e-books checked out from the library would need to be returned or purchased, because an EBX-formatted e-book is, in essence, the same as a physical book, Price adds. The user has the right to only one copy.

Glassbook is working with a number of e-book publishers and distributors but can not announce specific agreements now, Price said. E-books based on the EBX standard, as well as the consumer Glassbook reader, should be available by fall, he added.


Recommend this story?
Latest News
The ICT (information and communications technology) industry needs to do its part to help alleviate the current food crisis... 11-May-2008
A crafty site allows you to schedule a call to your own phone and get you out of bad meetings. 11-May-2008
Cities are still struggling to cut deals for municipal Wi-Fi, and standards remain uncertain, but universities have plunged into wireless nets. 11-May-2008
Who's really got the most eco-friendly networking gear? 11-May-2008
The newest eGo USB 2.0 Camo portable hard drive operates without separate power. 11-May-2008
The newest Internet-enabled gadgets stifle creativity along with collaboration, according to new academic research. 11-May-2008
The new Super-WriteMaster SH-S223, touted as the fastest 22x writer, is available in the Indian market. 11-May-2008
Businesses are realizing--and investing in--some of the functions of social networking sites for internal communicaitons. 11-May-2008
Text messages and a 'Catholic Facebook' are components of an electronic outreach. 11-May-2008
Microsoft wants to turn your car into a Windows machine (please, no "crash" jokes) with in-dash infotainment and diagnostic systems. 11-May-2008

PC World's Marketplace

PC World's Free Whitepapers

Name City
Address 1 State Zip
Address 2 E-mail (optional)