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The other day I was at the library and I noticed they had a “petting zoo” set up so patrons could play with all the different options for ereaders. I love the library but even more I love reading books on my iPad so being able to read library books on my iPad is a dream come true for me. Ask your librarian if your library has ebook borrowing options or visit your library’s website to figure out what is available to your community.

My library is a part of the Northern California Digital Library powered by Overdrive. Overdrive seems to be the most popular service powering digital libraries so if your library also uses Overdrive this is how you borrow Kindle books.

  1. Log in to the Overdrive website. My library has it set up so that all I need to do is enter my library card number, I didn’t need to do anything else to set up an account.
  2. Search the catalog for a book you’d like to read. I can search either via the Overdrive interface or via my library’s complete online catalog which provides a direct link to the book in the Overdrive catalog if it’s available digitally as well. This is what a search result looks like:

    (If a book you’d like to read is not currently available, it’s search result will have an option to “Place a hold” rather than “Add to BookBag”. When you place a hold, you’ll get an email as soon as it’s available to add to your bookbag and then you’d proceed through the rest of the tutorial in the same manner.)
  3. Click “Add to BookBag” which will take you to this screen:
  4. Continue to add other books of your choosing (my library allows up to 8 ebooks checked out a time for up to 3 weeks each). Once you’re ready to checkout click the “Proceed to Checkout” link:
  5. Use the “Lending period” drop down box to select how long you’d like to have the book for. I always go for the 3 week maximum. Then click the “Confirm Check Out” button:
  6. Make sure you have a Kindle or appropriate app downloaded before you proceed. I use the Kindle for iPad app. Then click the “Get for Kindle” button which will take you over to Amazon.com:
  7. In the green box in the upper right hand corner, select the device you want your library ebook sent to (I make sure my iPad is selected) and then click the yellow “Get Library Book” button:

Read your library ebook and enjoy! Kindle books (at least via the Northern California Digital Library) automatically return themselves when they are due (which is another dream come true).

But let’s say you’ve already got the maximum 8 books checked out and you want to return one you already read so you can get another.

  1. Navigate to Amazon.com > Your Account > Manage Your Kindle:
  2. Click the “Actions” drop down button next to the item you’d like to return. Select the “Return this book” link. Then press “yes” to return the book and clear up a slot to borrow another.

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amazon cloud playerToday I opened my Google RSS Reader to “Oh snap! Look who just ate Apple and Google’s lunch here?” which is quite possibly the most entertaining sentence I’ve ever started my day by reading. I’m still cracking up over 3 hours later.

I love the idea of a cloud player but there are a couple reasons that I won’t be using Amazon’s cloud player.

Number one: 5gb

My smallest iPod holds 8gb of music. My iTunes music library is pushing 50gb of music. 5gb doesn’t do anything for me. I can fit 5gb of music on my iPhone and still have tons and tons of space for apps and photos so why should I duplicate what I’ve got going on there in another player?

Number two: Statistics

The reason I’ve always been hooked on iTunes is because it was the first desktop music player to ever keep track of statistics. I’ve painstakingly made sure that my statistics were transported along with my music files every time I’ve switched computers since I started using iTunes in 2004. As a statistic geek there is no way I want to give up that 7 years of data so I’ll have to keep using my iPod, iPhone, or iPad to listen to my music (each of which holds way more than 5gb of music) until Apple comes out with their own cloud service. An iTunes branded cloud service that kept those statistics in the cloud would be more valuable to me than any service that keeps my music files in the cloud.

I do hope this is the kick in the pants Apple needs to get the cloud iTunes that’s been rumored for at least 9 months released.

Are you going to try Amazon’s cloud player? What do you like or dislike about it?

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The iPad 2 is coming out this week. For Christmas, my family said I could pick out my own gift in a certain price range. The only thing I could even think of wanting was an iPad. The 3g 64gb model I want is a little above the price range but my birthday is coming up in April so my family agreed it could be my combined Christmas/birthday present. So I’ve been waiting and waiting for the 2 to be released because I always like to buy my Apple products right at the beginning of the release cycle.

And now I’m starting to have iPad anxiety.

I have my iPhone which already has 3g functionality. And I just got a 13″ MacBook Pro from work which I can lug around when I travel.

I got rid of my 15″ MacBook Pro and got the iMac last summer with the intention of getting an iPad for travel when I needed something a little bigger than my iPhone for taking notes and handling email, but now the MacBook Pro fills that need.

So what’s left that I really want the iPad for? I want it to be a glorified ereader. So far I’ve only purchased Kindle books but I like the fact that with the iPad I can have not only Kindle for iPad but also iBooks and the Barnes & Noble and Borders ereader apps.

I also like that the iPad is in color unlike the Kindle and that I can use other apps on it like Evernote.

And so I suffer from anxiety because whether I get the $829 iPad (as a gift) plus pay the additional monthly cost for data plan (on an as needed basis since when I’m not traveling I feel like I have plenty of wifi access) or the $189 Kindle with unlimited free 3g I’ll feel like I made the wrong choice.

Which would you pick and why?

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