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Breaking the Page: Preview Edition [Kindle Edition]

Peter Meyers
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

"Multimedia” and “interactivity" are the poster kids for ebooks' potential, but how do they really make books better? Breaking the Page delivers an inspirational answer, filled with real-world examples that demonstrate how innovators are fulfilling screen publishing's promise without botching the reading experience.

Every digital book ingredient gets a deep-tissue inspection. From navigational dashboards to new kinds of indexes, from animated typography to stop-motion tutorials, Breaking the Page maps out how to conceive reader-friendly productions. Above all, it's a skeptic's design guide—as much about what to leave out as what to put in. It will challenge you to think about adding enhancements not simply because you can but, instead, only when you should. Coverage includes advice on how to:

  • Integrate audio, links, and motion so they partner with prose rather than distract from it
  • Design content to match the reader’s mindset—from info snackers to patient perusers
  • Compose for the traditional page as well as the “infinite canvas”
  • Instrument “smarter” books that aid memory and assist comprehension
  • Conceive multi-state graphics and customizable charts
  • Embed social tools to harness reader enthusiasm while respecting their need to focus
  • Make sense of everything from eInk to ePub, and from app books to books in browsers

This free Preview Edition is a three-chapter sampling of the full book. You'll find thought-provoking looks at why readers browse, navigate, and search, and the unique ways that digital productions can service these needs. Loaded with best practice case studies, this book belongs on the screen of anyone who cares about how we will communicate ideas in the 21st century.



Product Details

  • File Size: 5150 KB
  • Print Length: 125 pages
  • Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
  • Publisher: O'Reilly Media; 1 edition (December 5, 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B006IIXBO0
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Enabled
  • Lending: Not Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #12,616 Free in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Free in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

3.8 out of 5 stars
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3.8 out of 5 stars
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A good teaser March 30, 2012
Format:Kindle Edition
Breaking the Page is a promising title. The preview edition is a great idea, similar to O'Reilly Rough Cuts or Manning's MEAP programme, it is used to gain feedback from the readership during the writing process. The are three available chapters in the ebook as of writing this review. The author has got 20+ years experience in technology and writing and he runs a very interesting blog on digital books. The expertise can be felt through the pages of the title.

The three chapters are about searching and navigating in digital books. Surely, ebook readers are trying to imitate the dead-tree book experience. Although they did great job, there are features that should be redesigned on the new platform. The idea of table of content and the index are about getting an impression about the book and navigating through the text. The first two chapters examine how we can adapt ebooks to the new media. The approach will be familiar for everyone who reads about interaction design and/or information architecture, since Meyers is talking about some sort of design patterns and not about the underlying technology. The third chapter is stub. After a good diagnosis, the treatment should come, but this chapter fails to deliver a detailed explanation of how to make navigation better. But this is a preview edition so more to come later.

As a teaser, I'd definitely recommend the book to everyone interested in digital books. I'm eagerly waiting for the final version.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Cerys
Format:Kindle Edition
As an author and usability person I was keen to read this book about `transforming books and the reading experience', a subject that has been a professional interest of mine for several years. This version of the book is the Review version, so it is not entirely complete and polished. The book discusses ideas and examples of how electronic books can or have been designed to transform the way that people read and learn compared to paper based books.

The first chapter in the review version discusses strategies for introducing users to the contents of an electronic book. The chapter discusses how the traditional `table of contents' is a poor substitute compared to flicking through a book to get to grips with the contents. The chapter gives a variety of ideas on more exciting ways of enticing users with the contents of the book. The following chapter deals with the benefits of providing a good index and a variety of methods for searching for specific content within books. The final chapter in the review version of the book extends the discussion from chapter one on navigation within books, including how the user knows where they are, how much is left to go, and how to get back to where they have been.

Pete has a chatty and informal style, and his writing demonstrates his enthusiasm for producing compelling books and educational material for mobile. The book contains some interesting ideas around user interface design for accessing and locating information within books and mobile applications. I found it particularly valuable when the ideas were illustrated with the use of real-world examples that I could actually go and take a look at, for example I was introduced to some interesting mobile apps that I had not seen before. Not all of the ideas are illustrated with examples, even where a real-world example is discussed. The book itself talks about a picture being worth a thousand words and for those ideas without a picture to explain them yet I'd like to see those added (chapter one seems incomplete in this regard).

A problem I did have with this version is the blurry line between eBook, book reader, mobile app, and web interface. The book gives ideas about how the experience of using an eBook can be improved through changes to interface design, but sometimes it is unclear whether this can be done in eBook format, whether you need to make a mobile app to do it, or whether the change needs to be made at the level of the eBook reader. I'm left wanting to know more, not programmatically how to create some of these features, but whether I can do them in eBook format or I have to write an app. I'm left not being sure who the book is written for, is it for authors of books, application developers, publishers, or eBook reader developers? The book seems part design advice and part wishlist! Also, the book is `just' a normal book, I had hoped it might demonstrate some of the whizzy ideas suggested!

Saying all that, there are some good ideas and sound principles in the book that will be of interest to folks involved in authoring, publishing, and developing applications for mobile devices.
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3.0 out of 5 stars This is a good book February 7, 2013
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I liked this book cus it really help me to consider the way to think the world is coming to be. The digital world.
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