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http://cebooks.blogspot.com Investigating ebook technology and other digital 'contents' for PDA, especially Pocket PC (...and iPod)

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TOP 10 ebook sites
(updated April 4, 04)
1. FictionWise,
multi formats one stop shopping site, include non fiction and exclusive short fictions.
2. BlackMask, the best free ebook site in several formats.
3. PeanutPress, award winning ebook store for PDA, friendly DRM solutions.
4. Execubook, eSummaries that deliver wisdom. Perfect for PDA users.
5. eBookAd, many indies label are here
6. Univ. of Virginia Library, Free ebooks
7. FreeeLiterature dot com, classics for free
8. Memoware, free documents from volunteers.

9. ESSPC, great place to start your collection (Free)
10.The Online Book Page, from U.Penn.
new
 

5 Recommended eBooks from my ebook shelf
(April 04)
(email me for 10% off coupon)

1. Don't Know Much About History
2. Dirty Little Secrets
3. Killing The Buddha
4. The Get With the Program! Guide to Fast Food and Family Restaurants
5. Flirt Coach
 

Pocket PC eBooks
Bestseller List
(Jan-Mar 04)

1. Star Trek Series
2. Angels and Demons
3. Holly Bible NIV ed.
4. The Da Vinci Code
5. Deception Points
6. Letters to Penthouse XIX
7. Letters to Penthouse XVIII
8. Resolutions
9. 7 Keys to Weight Loss Freedom
10. Against All Enemies

 

 
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Mazingo dead
 
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iPod Links: new
 
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Pocket PC eBooks Watch - eBook and beyond  
 http://cebooks.blogspot.com 

  4/12/2004

Copyfuture
A critical eye on copyright law
If, as the old New Economy shibboleth goes, information wants to be free, why is it everywhere in chains?
Why does the Recording Industry Association of America bring enormous punitive lawsuits against high school kids who have used their browsers to download MP3s? Why do online archives grind to a halt in the face of a copyrighted poem? And why does Congress now enjoy the effective power to renew copyrights in perpetuity -- even though no less an authority than the U.S. Constitution states flatly that such congressional grants can exist only ``for limited Times''?
Stanford law Professor Lawrence Lessig looks at these and other mysteries of U.S. copyright enforcement in ``Free Culture,'' a more judicial-minded sequel to his earlier book ``The Future of Ideas.''

posted by Jerry permanent link