Publishing with Amazon: My reflections

I recently ran a test of all publishing services for one of my classes as we are publishing a book together. After evaluating all options, we decided to publish with Amazon. So before I published that book with my class I wanted to see what the tool was really like, so I published another book. Here is my experience:

I formatted my book into PDF format and then I signed into createspace. Overall, it was very easy to use. I created a book title, entered author information, and then had to choose payment information. I then selected if my book would be color or black and white and what size it would be. At first I chose 6×9 but realized that I created my book in word and it was 8.5×11 so I had to choose 8.5×11. Otherwise there were no formatting issues. Then I created a cover. Amazon has a great cover creator template that was very easy to use. It does not allow much customization and I think it can be improved tremendously however it was good enough. I have a feeling they will not improve it as they want you to purchase the design services they offer. Once my book was created I had to choose a price. The cheapest my book could be sold for was $2.65. That means that I can sell for 2.65 or higher. At $2.65 I collect no royalty. I chose $4.99. This means that for every copy sold I get $0.84 from Amazon. Not too great but honestly my book is on amazon.com and they are doing all of the work. I am still waiting for the book to be listed on Amazon, they say it take 5-7 business days and today is day 1:) I will post the book to the blog once it is posted to Amazon. Also, you can order copies for yourself as author for $2.15 a copy and provide discount codes to family/friends.

Here is what my book looks like in the createspace store. It should be uploaded to Amazon in the next 5-7 business days: https://www.createspace.com/3864560

Now onto Kindle publishing. Well this was a bit more complicated and I will need to continue this post when it works because right now my book is in limbo with Kindle. Publishing was just as easy as Amazon’s createspace. The only difference was that I needed to reformat my text. Kindle recognized certain symbols but not others. For instance, a lot of my text, such as the beginning and end of each chapter was smashed together. Thus I had to use page breaks. It took me about and hour to reformat, so be prepared for that. Then I submitted my text for review. My book is currently in limbo because I have two websites that offer sections of the book for free on the sites. So Amazon is currently making sure I actually own those sites because they did an online content check. I am glad they are checking for copyright and people scamming the system however this is taking longer and I am now waiting two days for a response. I am hoping this issue is cleared up asap. I also hope that I do not have to take the content down from the sites before publishing with Kindle.

 

New Samsung Phone: Galaxy S3

For more info: http://www.thenextgalaxy.com/

Galaxy S3 confirmed

– 4.8 inch screen
– 8mp camera (1.9 inch front camera)
– 2100 battery
– summer launch in America
– looks very similar to nexus
– 2 feature – s-voice and s-stay – both look ok but are bloatware.
– 1.4 GHZ Quad core processor
– MicroSD slot
– Runs ICS Android 4.0
– 1 GB Ram

My thoughts from what I have seen ( I have not touched the phone or seen it in real life): It’s a definite upgrade the S2 and GNex, however, it is not what I would call significant. It’s reminds me of the upgrade from the iPhone 4 to the 4s. Some specs are great, like the quad core, and microSD card. But the S2 has an 8MP camera already. And while Samsung is really pushing their bloatware – it’s bloatware, although I will admit that if you did not want the bloatware you already have a Gnex which has a vanilla version of Android 4.0 on it. Would I buy this phone? Well I have the Gnex so there is no way this is worth the upgrade. I personally do NOT want bloatware – but that is my big selling point. Additionally, I have the extended battery for the Gnex which is the same one used as default on this phone. Others really like the microSD card, that alone may be a huge selling point. If I had the S2 I would probably upgrade although honestly if you care about a better camera, phones will have 10-12mp by the end of the year.

Samsung Galaxy S3 to be announced tomorrow (May 3rd)

For those that have been waiting for this phone tomorrow is the big announcement from London: 2pm EST

Here is the website and access to live streaming from the event: http://www.thenextgalaxy.com/

Current phone rumors:

– quad core 1.2 or 1.5 Ghz processor
– 1 GB Ram
– 12 mp camera
– 720 or 1080 screen
– Android 4.0
– all carriers potentially

Here is a video with the add:

End of semester: Grading time!

My semester is over! Now it’s time to grade, grade, grade. Unfortunately for me once grading is over, my job is not. At that point, it’s time me to begin writing. Additionally, I am teaching a course summer 1. This is a new course so I have a lot of prep work ahead of me.

TED-ED Videos and Lessons

Now on the TED website (http://ed.ted.com/) you can not only post videos, but you can create quizzes, add materials, and even keep track of your users. Seems pretty cool and is a great way to promote open education. Check out the video that walks you through the new site:

Harvard pushing open access journals

Harvard is pushing its faculty to publish in open access journals due the high prices that journals charge. Here is the article: http://www.engadget.com/2012/04/25/harvard-overpaying-for-research-wants-open-access/

I have recently been thinking about this concept: I spend a lot of time writing an article, months of revision, and finally get it published only to find that my school needs to pay a significant amount of money to access the article. Not only that, but I am paid nothing and lose rights to it. Additionally, this journal will probably ask me to help peer review their articles, again paying me nothing. This makes no sense. Either the schools or professors need to be paid for this work and should not be charge outrageous amounts of money for journal access since all of the leg work was done for free by faculty. So open access makes sense. Open access journals are usually online and available for free to anyone.

The only problem for myself? I am not a full professor so I need to continue publishing to the ‘top’ journals whether they are open access or not. So while I applaud Harvard’s effort, I hope that they are telling their junior faculty that they do not need to go for the ‘top’ journals but rather open access journals (and open access can be the ‘top tier 1’ journals but I am just assuming they are not in all cases)

Cloud Storage options…Which is best?

With many dropbox clones making their way into mainstream, I thought I would blog about each of them to show their strengths/weaknesses.

Dropbox – Works on mac, windows, iOS, Android

2GB – Free
50GB – $99 year
100GB – $199 year
Team option – need to contact for details

Box – Works on mac, windows, iOS, Android

5GB – Free
25GB – $9.99 month
50GB – $19.99 month

Microsoft Skydrive – will work on Windows and Mac and iOS

7GB Free
20GB – $10 a year
50GB – $25 a year
100GB – $50 a year

Google Drive – Works on mac, windows, iOS (coming soon), Android

5GB – Free
25GB – $2.49 month
100GB – $4.99 month
1TB – $49.99 month

BitCasa – Works on mac, windows, iOS, Android

Unlimited space for Free!

Apple’s i-Cloud – iOS, Mac, Windows

5GB – Free
10GB – $20 year
20GB – $40 year
50GB – $100 year

Amazon’s Cloud Drive – works on both mac and pc

5GB free
20GB – $20 a year
100GB – $100 a year
1000GB – $1000 a year

My recommendation: Dropbox or Box for ease of use. BitCasa for storage. Also, look out for deals from these services as they compete with each other. For instance, I got 50GB free for life from Box for downloading their Android app when it was first released.

CS6 Rumor: Cloud based purchasing

We will find out everything about CS6 today but here is the latest. There will be a cloud based service so that users can purchase the software at $50 a month instead of buying it forever. This means that you could essentially rent the software. This would actually be great for my students who only need it for a few months:

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/04/23/adobe-cs6-subscription-creative-cloud-photoshop-official/