I lost my Silk Pagoda DVD, or so I thought, but came across it this afternoon. It contains 10,000 e-books in Mobipocket format. I tested some of them out on my Kindle and they worked just fine.  Hooray!!

This reminded me of Silk Pagoda and I went over there to see what’s new. Well, he has all the DVDs on sale for $9.99 – Sony Reader, Mobipocket/Kindle, eReader and Acrobat format. This is quite a deal. Here is the listing of all the authors covered in the DVD.

7 COMMENTS

  1. I only take one or two books at a time from the DVD, so I don’t know how many it could hold. David is right, if you use a large card you could fit hundreds, or thousands, of books onto either platform. The DVD has a total of 3.5G of data. However, if you loaded all this stuff onto a card I suspect that neither platform has the processing power to quickly index it all. It would probably slow the machines to a crawl.

  2. Actually, that’s a technical error. Looks like Rashomon got reactivated too, which is on Munsey’s.

    Anyway, my ebay licensee has been kicking Silk’s ass, selling 1,500 ebooks on a card, since Feb., and the site primarily exists to send out reader copies and advance review. I’m guessing it was a recent “fix,” but right now, trying to see if the Ravens can set a record for most punts in a pre-season game.

    Somebody wants the disk, fine, ’til tomorrow night. Thanks…

    /It’s book festival season, so I’m going to republics of China and Texas starting Sept. 3, won’t really be home until after the small press show, and my wife will be spending her alone time getting the Shih-Tzu to remember her, a task made more difficult by Dusty’s all-organic diet.

  3. I purchased the Silk Pagoda disc last December for the $10 that it is on “sale” now so I don’t understand the sale price. I got it because I don’t always have internet access and hadn’t learned about feedbooks yet when I got it. I have lots of books and most of them are in the *.prc format, which I prefer over the *.azw format. I have read 24 Edgar Rice Burroughs so far and am really enjoying the very wide selection of public domain books. I am old enough that some of these I read in high school, like “Ivanhoe” for example. It is a pleasure to re-read them knowing I won’t be quizzed on them and being able to just enjoy the story without having to analyze the thing to death. But then I am probably older than most of you.

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