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Showing posts with label Delhi Book Fair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Delhi Book Fair. Show all posts

Thursday, September 6, 2012

E-books, e-library - for your reading pleasure


E-books, e-library - for your reading pleasure
E-books, e-library - for your reading pleasure (Thinkstock photos/Getty Images)
An online library that also offers a pick-up and drop facility for books, getting to browse through various language newspapers at one site, or mastering the intricacies of math and science at the click of a mouse - welcome to the exciting world of e-books that beckons at the Delhi Book Fair. 

The Sep 1-9 Delhi Book Fair is focussing this year on e-books and e-publishing, and visitors at the fair can now purchase books online. 

The online library hookedonbook.com offersreaders thousands of titles to choose from and also provides pickup and drop of the books. 
Another site, readwhere.com, allows readers to browse through their choice of newspapers,comics and magazines and one can also purchase digitized books online. 
Both these e-sites are another innovative venture - meritnation.com - that provides online teaching material to students from Classes 1-12. The online tutorial has simply written texts, videos and cartoons to make the chapters easy, as well as weekly tests and a forum for asking questions. 
Vikram Khosla, the owner of hookedonbook.com, said he has 40,000 titles in his collection. 
"Subscribers can browse through the collection and list their 10 preferred titles. We will get their top favourite book delivered at their doorstep," Khosla told us. 
Once the person has finished reading, a call or a mail to the site will get a man to pick up the book. "While coming to pick up the book our man will bring along the next book in the subscribers' list," added Khosla. 
How will they ensure books remain in good condition? 
"Our books will be checked and the subscriber will be asked to sign on a slip of paper before the book is given to him." 
The rates begin from a starter plan of Rs.200 a month, for two books per month, and goes up to Rs.1,000 per month for unlimited number of books to be rented in a month. 
Khosla said he hit upon the idea when his daughters, who used to frequent libraries in the US, "started buying books after coming to India and realized there are very few libraries here". 
Those living outside Delhi can also subscribe. Their books will be couriered by Fedex, he added. 
Khosla is also planning to set up leisure reading rooms in south Delhi's Saket area soon, equipped "with bean bags, soft music, and light coffee - where people, including kids, can spend hours enjoying the reading experience". 
The online tutorials site, meritnation.com, is a venture by naukri
"We provide all study material online, including through visuals and diagrams," Priti Vajpayee, an official of the site, told us. 
Students can also post their queries online and an expert answers their query. 
"We also host live tests so that students are well prepared," said Vajpayee, adding the site gets "7,000 sign-ins a day". 
The e-tutorials cost Rs.2,200 for a year for two subjects, while a package of all the subjects costs Rs.4,500 a year. Tutorials for attempting the IIT-JEE engineering exams cost Rs.14,000 a year. 
Another interesting site - readwhere.com - offers readers a whole array of vernacular language newspapers, magazines and comics. 
It also allows booksellers to go for e-publishing of their books and has an online bookstore from which readers can order books online. 
"Ours is a free site where readers can access newspapers and magazines," said Arun Nair, an official for the managers of the site. 
"Our focus is getting various language newspapers. We sell e-books too," Nair told us. 
He said the site had developed a software that would prevent copying of paid content. "An e-book can be accessed by the buyer but not downloaded," said Nair. 
The buyer can save the e-book in an app memory, which could be accessed without any internet even while travelling.
Read More News at:  Times of India

Friday, August 17, 2012

Beginning September 1, Delhi Book Fair to focus on e-books


NEW DELHI: Beginning on September 1, the latest edition of the Delhi Book Fair will focus on e-books. The nine-day long fair will be held at Pragati Maidan. 

"E-books are catching on as a trend. We have got OverDrive, one of the largest international digital distributors of e-books as a participant in the fair this time. We will also have a two-day seminar on e-books and demonstrations for publishers," says Shakti Malik, treasurer, Federation of Indian Publishers and the director of the Delhi Book Fair. 

Audio books, which got a small, dedicated space in the International Book Fair earlier this year, won't get a similar attention at the Delhi Book Fair. "E-books is a hotter trend now and audio books are yet to catch on in India. We might consider that later," says Malik. 

A delegation of 20 Chinese businessmen is expected to visit for negotiations on translations. "It is surprising, but they are interested in a lot of technical books about computers and the like from India," says Malik. 

Close to 300 publishers are expected to participate this year. Visitors can avail the 11 air-conditioned mini-buses that will ferry them to the exhibition halls from the gates at the sprawling venue. Students carrying an identity card will get a 50% discount on the entry ticket. 

The festival is a collaborative project between the India Trade Promotion Organisation (ITPO) and Federation of Indian Publishers.