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DK Publishing's Visual Guides and Travel Guides Coming to iPad?

June 18, 2010

Dk_ipad

I'm not much of a coffee table book person.  First, I don't own a coffee table.  Second, most of these books are bigger than my apartment.   They never sit nicely on a shelf, or fit properly in a box.  Yes, my troubles know no end.  But I make an exception for the Definitive Visual Guides and Eyewitness Travel Guides series published by Dorling Kindersley (DK).  If there is such a thing as a well-worn coffee table book, my copy of "The Universe: a Definitive Visual Guide" certainly qualifies. 

DK Publishing is renowned for its distinctive, beautifully illustrated edu-tainment books.  They are also known for nearly bankrupting themselves in 1999 by miscalculating consumer demand for 18 million Star Wars books.  Reminiscent of the great Atari 2600 E.T. game disaster of 1982, DK sold only a fraction of their inventory.  However, instead of dumping all the books in a landfill like Atari did with the game cartridges, D.K. continued to make efforts to sell off the extra inventory.  In 2000 DK was taken over by the Pearson PLC media company and made part of Penguin Group, which also owns the Penguin Books label.

But back to the books.  The photographs are gorgeous, the diagrams are rich and immersive, and there's just enough digestible, bite-sized nuggets of information to keep you engrossed and engaged in discovery for hours on end.

Dk-animals

In other words, exactly the kind of content you'd want to consume on a tablet.

Thankfully, someone at Penguin agrees.  As I was doing some research for a current iOS project, I stumbled upon the concept video below from Penguin that hints at what an Definitive Visual Guide and an Eyewitness Travel Guide experience might look like on an iPad.

While not nearly as impressive as Bonnier's futuristic concept video for Pop Sci magazine, the ideas in this DK/Penguin video are far more realistic and achievable.  But you only need to browse one of their real books to see how nicely their content could be converted to 3D interactive graphics and timelines, video, popovers, and searchable text for a tablet.  I particularly enjoy the implied feature in the Paris Travel Guide that allows you to create an itinerary. 

Here's to hoping I can retire my cumbersome and dogeared copy of "The Universe" to a storage locker someday soon.

 

Filed under  //   iPad   publishing   tablets  

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A Not So Easy Way To Add Bookmarklets To Safari For iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch

April 22, 2010

No-bookmarks
Let me tell you something you probably already know.

Bookmark management in Safari for the iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch completely sucks.

Yes, you could manage your bookmarks with whatever version of Safari you happen to be running on your desktop or laptop, and then synchronize the bookmarks to your devices through iTunes. That works great if you're one of the 2% of crazies that actually use Safari or pay Apple $99 a year for MobileMe. You could also import all of your bookmarks from IE or Firefox or what-have-you into Safari and then synchronize to your devices. Knock yourself out. I'm sure that will be a great use of your time and that you'll really enjoy regularly maintaining your bookmarks across browsers and devices.

None of this ever really bothered me, though. I don't use browser bookmarks anyway (does anyone anymore?) There's browser history and address bar autocomplete, not to mention there are more than enough online tools to keep track of where you've been, where you want to go back to, and what you want to remember. All of this eliminates the need to load up your browser with thousands of bookmarks.

What I do use, however, is bookmarklets -- those tasty little bits of Javascript that masquerade as bookmarks but add actual functionality and convenience to your everyday World-Wide-Web experience. Unfortunately, getting these bookmarklets into Safari on the iPhone is an extremely painful process. But that didn't bother me either... until I got my iPad.

Once I got my hands on the pad, I quickly realized I could no longer function without my beloved bookmarklets. I found myself surfing in a way that mimicked my desktop browsing behavior much more closely than when I browsed on the iPhone.  This meant that I now needed to have my bookmarklets for sharing, posting, tagging, saving, look-ups, etc. But the steps for adding a bookmarklet on the iPad was the same as with the iPhone -- an awful one.

The process is far too painful to describe in detail, but Marco Arment of Instapaper details the procedure nicely in his step-by-step guide to adding the Instapaper bookmarklet to an iPhone or iPad.

Basically, you first need to add a placeholder bookmark, and then edit that bookmark by renaming it and pasting the bookmarklet's Javascript into the field reserved for the bookmark's URL. That doesn't sound so terrible until you realize it involves somewhere between 10 and 13 taps as well as typing and pasting.

It goes something like this:  

bookmarklet-madness

Of course that's only IF you managed to find a way to copy a bookmarklet's Javascript to your clipboard.

And that, for me, is the part that goes beyond pain and crosses over into torture territory. Bookmarklets are created by putting Javascript into a URL.  This enables you to drag the snippet to your browser's bookmark bar like any other link.  Unfortunately this just wont work in Safari for the i-Devices. And if you think you can take a gander at the page's source in mobile Safari and copy the Javascript from there, you are mistaken. Furthermore, it isn't standard practice (thankfully) for bookmarklet creators to put the bookmarklet's Javascript on the page for you to copy and paste into a bookmark. In most cases that would be fugly. And stupid.

So I took a few minutes to copy the Javascript from all my Chrome bookmarklets and made myself a little iPhone/iPad formatted page with all the Javascript in a selectable textarea for each bookmarklet. I opened up the page on my gadgets, and in about 5 minutes had all of my important bookmarklets loaded into Safari on both my iPad and my iPhone.

I know this is far from ideal, and even further from anything resembling a solution, but until some smart person comes up with a way around this, or until Apple adds some better bookmark management or add-on capabilities to mobile Safari this will have to do for now.

I'll leave this page up for anyone who wants to add some of these bookmarklets to Safari on their own iPads or iPhones. Just visit http://static.chrisbray.com/bookmarklets on your iPad or iPhone and start tapping.  I hope this takes at least some of the pain out of the process.

Here is the list of somewhat popular bookmarklet Javascripts that I have on the page.  Note that bookmarklets that utilize selected page text (Wikipedia lookup, dictionaries, searches, etc.) wont work due to the way that Apple has implemented select/copy/cut/paste on i-Devices, so I haven't included any of those.

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Let me know if you'd like to see other popular bookmarklets added, and I'll do my best to throw them in there when I have the time.

 

Filed under  //   iPad   interfaces    mobile  

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