Google’s Play Books now lets you upload any e-book you, ahem, happen to have on any of your Android

Google’s Play Books now lets you upload any e-book you, ahem, happen to have on any of your Android devices to your central repository. Neat.

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Reading Net: Catch of the Day, Bookworms

If you’re filthy rich and happen to have a huge expansive library in your very own home, then you might have some use for this reading net. Otherwise, all you can do is stare at it longingly like the rest of us. Because while the net itself probably isn’t expensive, what’s the use if you don’t have a library to hang it in and complete the concept?

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As you can see, the reading net is exactly what its name implies it is: it’s a net where kids can lie on while they do some reading. What makes it extra special is the fact that it’s meant to be hung over the first floor of the library.

[The Reading Net is] a meshed fabric suspended from the architecture of a family library, that acts as a second-level reading range. the hanging web is tautly attached to the railings of a lofted path, and — as both children and adults climb onto the woven expanse — they can both lounge and learn on the buoyant surface.

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The reading net was designed by Playoffice.

[via Boing Boing via designboom via Geekologie]

How Braille Was Invented

How Braille Was Invented

Braille was invented by a nineteenth century man named Louis Braille, who was completely blind.

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Get Great Book Recommendations From Interesting People

Get Great Book Recommendations From Interesting People

You’ve read millions of good books, so what do you recommend when people ask you, "Uhh, what should I put in my brain next?" A new website, Just One Book, hosts a collection of such recommendations from interesting people.

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Google’s New Android App Delivers All Your News in One Place

Google’s New Android App Delivers All Your News in One Place

Google released a new magazine and news-reading app for Android today designed to bring all your daily reads together into one piece of software.

    



This Book Shows You What It’s Like to Have Dyslexia

This Book Shows You What It's Like to Have Dyslexia

For people with dyslexia, relating their struggle with reading to the general population can be a seemingly impossible and frustrating task. Graphic designer (and dyslexic) Sam Barclay, though, hopes to finally bridge the gap between those with reading difficulties and those without using his new book—a visual experience of what dyslexia actually entails.

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Nook GlowLight Review: Pretty Screen, Silly Body

Nook GlowLight Review: Pretty Screen, Silly Body

Back in 2012 Barnes and Noble introduced built-in frontlighting to the ereader world, beating Amazon at its own game—for a few months, anyway Since then, there have been not one but two Kindle Paperwhites, but now B&N is bringing out its follow-up Nook GlowLight. And it almost reclaims the top spot.

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This Browser Extension Uses Color to Make You a Lightning Fast Reader

This Browser Extension Uses Color to Make You a Lightning Fast Reader

Those looking to read faster will find an endless supply of tips and methods around the web. Beeline Reader is a service taking a unique approach—using color to guide your eye.

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Scribd launches subscription e-book service for Android, iOS and web

Scribd launches $9 subscription ebook service with HarperCollins titles

Many of us associate Scribd with embedded documents on websites, but the company has been quietly building an e-book platform — first by selling content and later by soft-launching a subscription service. The company is now making its strategy clear by formally launching the e-book service and introducing content from HarperCollins, its first major publisher. Subscribers worldwide can pay $9 per month for access to both HarperCollins’ back catalog and independent releases through apps for Android, iOS and the web. Customers can also buy any books outright, including HarperCollins’ newer titles. Like with any Scribd document (and Kindle for the Web), customers can both share what they’re reading and embed books into websites. If you like the prospect of all-you-can-read services like Oyster but want broader platform support, you’ll want to take a close look at Scribd’s new offering.

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Source: Scribd

Oyster for iPhone offers all-you-can-read e-books for $10 per month

Oyster beta for iPhone offers allyoucanread books for $10 per month

All-you-can-eat subscriptions work well for digital magazines, music and videos; why shouldn’t they work for e-books? Oyster certainly thinks they should, as it just launched a flat-rate book service for iPhone users. Members pay $10 per month for unfettered access to about 100,000 books from HarperCollins, Hougton Mifflin Harcourt and smaller publishers. The unlimited-use model also facilitates a Goodreads-like social component that shows what friends are reading at any given moment. Bookworms can request an invitation today. Oyster hasn’t said if or when the service will go without invitations, but it hopes to release an iPad app in the near future.

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Via: Pando Daily

Source: Oyster