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Mar 12, 2012

Booki.sh acquired by Overdrive

 

images (23)According to this report the innovative Australian company Booki.sh has been acquired by digital distributor Overdrive. Checking the Booki.sh FAQ site confirms it.

Booki what?

Booki.sh provides the ereading platform behind a number of independent Australian bookstores, Readings, Avid Reader and Gleebooks among them.  It’s a browser based service accessible by a range of net capable devices from desktop and laptop computers to IPhones and Android tablets.

Its a handy technology, provided you have some access to the internet. You can download a “satchel” to your browser and access the satchel while not connected to the net.

The impetus behind the development was to break the closed system model used by companies such as Amazon that generally required you to have a kindle ( though with Kindle for <insert device here> it seems slightly superfluous), so that you weren’t limited to any one device(except those that were net capable)1.

DRM but not as you know it

The system is devised so that you don’t actually download a file to your device, at least not in the traditional sense i.e. an epub file that you then open with your app of choice.  You don’t actually own a file that you can back up or move to another non net capable device. 

Which is why I generally baulk at a service like this.  I like to think that when I am paying for an ebook that I own it and I can store it in any fashion I so choose and access it without having to go through a middle party that can:

a) alter my library at any time

b) lock me out of my library2

That being said they do have a service by which you can upload your own legally obtained eBook files and  view them3 .  I have been doing this with Aurealis and Asim which the Kobo App doesn't seem to handle well and the process of loading the books is far easy than side loading on the Vox.

Overdrive is one of the largest providers of digital media content, supplying about 18,000 libraries, including some in Australia. The large attraction I suspect for Overdrive is that the service balances DRM and access fairly well.  If the purchaser doesn’t get a file, they can’t crack it and pirate it 4 and if you make the service available on any net capable device, legitimate users are less likely to be pushed toward illegal activity so they can access it on the device of their choice.

It will be interesting days ahead. One hopes that the acquisition isn’t just a snapping up of technology; as the team at Booki.sh were very supportive of the Australian book scene.


1. I engaged with one of Booki.sh developers over this point and their view was that net capable ereading devices were where the market was heading

2. *cough* Amazon *cough*

3. Once they are there though you will be unable to download them again.  Its not like dropbox.

4. Though I do recall hearing that there were folks that were trying to hack the service


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Comments (2)

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I'm still learning about my iPad. I've bought some books through the iBooks store and then been surprised to see that when I open them there's the Optus logo hovering over them. if I'm somewhere the net doesn't work, I can still open my ebooks, but there's a message saying 'SOS only", whatever that means. Presumably I can't download anything new without the Net, but my book is still there.

I think I mentioned my sister has inherited a Kobo from her son and is trying to work out how to use it. I had a look the other day and showed her how to press the "Store" button whenever she can get somewhere with a WiFi connection - cafe or whatever. But can she buy her books with an iTunes card? Get free classics from Gutenberg? You'd know, after a while with this device. Did you say ASIM and Aurealis don't come out well on the Kobo? What's the problem?
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1 reply · active 678 weeks ago
Re ASIM and Aurealis

The problem is entirely with the Kobo App which doesn't seem to like html. So if you have a html linked TOC it doesn't work. Don't worry, its ass-tastic for about 90% of the eBooks I have.

What I have had to do to fully experience both magazines is load the Bluefire reading app and Aldiko. Aldiko is the better service but I can only seem to workout how to upload ebooks to the bluefire folder and then import them from there into aldiko.

With Booki.sh I just uploaded the books to my account and waited for it to refresh and they were there to read. Much less stuffing around.

What sort of Kobo was it that she inherited? With anything other than the Vox I suspect that you would be limited to epubs loaded from your computer of those bought through Kobo.

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