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MAIN NEWS HEADLINES February 25 - March 4, 2010 Edition
Macmillan Introduces Distinctive Digital Textbook Platform
NEW YORK, NY/AUTHORLINK NEWS/02/23/10Macmillan Publishing this week launched
Dynamic Books, a new digital publishing platform and line of interactive books,
designed to combat the high price of textbooks and the threat of digital piracy.
Using the new platform, professors can easily customize content and present
it for download, online access or print-on-demand editions. The new line, initially
offering 20 titles, will be launched August 1 and will grow rapidly to 100 titles
or more. A $150 traditional print textbook will cost about $47 for the digital
Dynamic Book edition. Students can access the Dynamic edition online or download
it to a laptop, an iPhone or eventually to Apple's much anticipated iPad. The
books will be available directly from Macmillan and the Dynamic Books web site
and through college bookstores. Students can store their books in an online
library offered by the publisher.
Dynamic Books, a subsidiary unit of Macmillan, has been in development for two
years together with digital textbook publisher Vital Source and its sister company,
Ingrams Lightning Source.
Clancy Marshall, general manager of the new subsidiary, said a survey of students
and professors showed that students are unhappy with textbook pricing and professors
dislike revised editions. In addition, textbook piracy has become a major concern.
Dynamic Books interactive and downloadable textbooks will enable individual
professors to modify, delete, or add text, comments, or even video and audio.
Also, professors can keep their customized versions as long as they like.
Marshal said Macmillan's textbook authors do not object to the concept of customized
textbooks, because personalized content and revised sections in the Dynamic
Book will be clearly labeled as such and bear the instructor's name. In addition,
Macmillan's editors and textbook authors will review the best of the revisions
and include them in formal updates to the text every six months to keep material
current without issuing a revised edition. Marshall described the feature as
"open source without the scary part of just anybody changing the text."
Professors whose revisions are included in official updates will be eligible
to receive a $1 royalty when texts with their additions are purchased. Dynamic
Books also allow students to print out a limited number of pages or purchase
a POD version of the Dynamic Book with their professor's customized comments
in a black and white bound print edition for half the print price or a full
color version for the full print textbook price.
Macmillan will initially offer its own books in the Dynamic Book platform,
but the company plans to seek other publishers to use the platform. The company
says the new platform may change the way textbooks are conceived and written.
The web site Resource Shelf reports, however, that the system may frustrate
some users because such digital platforms have their own interfaces and formats
that the companies control. Advanced e-textbooks from one company are not compatible
with other companies platforms, and each system has its own quirks and
a learning curve for students and professors. We think this could make
for a lot of headaches for both students, faculty (including librarians), and
staff, the article by Jeffrey Young said.