Local Authors > Brandon Sanderson

Mistborn Annotations in one big file

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Asri:
OK guys, I just sent the first version of the file to my Kindle and I'm so excited!  I still have a little bit of clean-up to do, but it came out great!  I even have the spoilers set up as footnotes that link to a different page.

I don't wanna get in copyright trouble or anything, so when I'm done, I'll send the source file to Peter to do with as they please.

If anyone has a Kindle and messages me with your @free.kindle.com email address, I'll send the Mistborn 1 annotations to you and it'll automatically be downloaded next time you connect to wireless.  You can find your email address on the second page of the Kindle settings screen.

I don't know how this will work on other e-readers, but I have a Kobo also, so I'll test it on there too when I get a chance.

happyman:
OK, so I've been avoiding getting an e-reader.  For a long time, they were much more trouble than they were worth.

They've been adding functionality you just can't get from a book, haven't they?  Aagh!

Asri:
I was worried at first about giving up paper books, but I absolutely love my e-reader.  After reading The Way of Kings in hardback, I got so aggravated with how awkward that giant book was in my small hands, that I finally broke down and bought an e-reader.
I didn't want to buy any e-books that I already owned a paper version of, but I got the urge to re-read Mistborn, so I bought the trilogy on the Kindle.
If you love to read, pamper yourself and get one!

Inkthinker:
Virtual environments allow for new rules on what can and cannot be done, and how easily.

I made the switch to digital drawing about 5 years ago, and I still can't believe some of the stuff I can do now. Undo alone is a trick that would have made any professional illustrator 20 years ago crap his drawers. Layering adds an outrageous amount of control. Texturing is a whole new art form, it bears practically no relation to what that term would have meant before digital painting became mainstream.

It's no surprise that the same thing is happening with digital reading. Thanks mostly to the internet, the factors are finally in alignment; sufficient saturation of content (the Net) + familiarity with the format (because everyone's gotten used to reading on a screen thanks to the Net) + affordable, effective platforms (kindles, nooks, smartphones, touchpads). It's been projected for decades, but it couldn't work until those factors aligned, and now it's finally happening.

The ability to conduct keyword searches alone places the digital text file over the physical book in terms of practicality. Not to mention that you can just about hold the entire Library of Congress in your back pocket (and that qualifier won't be necessary in another five years).

Physicality will hold more value. Quality of content will probably lessen overall, but when it's good it will likely be very, very good... it'll need to be, in order to survive. It'll cost more to own a real book, but maybe less to own a virtual one.

I'm still waiting for someone to start offering a free e-book with the purchase of a real one. Or at least a discount 2-pack.

Asri:
Mistborn 1 & 2 are done.  Here is the link. http://cid-5bccb4efe328c359.office.live.com/browse.aspx/Brandon%20Sanderson%20Annotations
Other annotations will be added here as they're completed.
If you have a Kindle, just send the .html file to your @free.kindle.com email address as an attachment.

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