AAP reports e-books now account for over 22 percent of US publishers’ revenue

It’s well off the triple year-over-year growth that e-books saw a few years ago , but the latest report from the Association of American Publishers shows that e-books did inch up even further in 2012 to account for a sizeable chunk of overall book sales. According to its figures, e-books now represent 22.55 percent of US publishers’ total revenue — up from just under 17 percent in 2011 — an increase that helped push net revenue from all book sales up 6.2 percent to $7.1 billion for the year. As the AAP notes, this report also happens to mark the tenth anniversary of its annual tracking of e-book sales; back at the beginning in 2002, their share of publishers’ net revenue clocked in at a mere 0.05 percent. The group does caution that the year-to-year comparison back that far is somewhat anecdotal, however, given changing methodologies and definitions of e-books. Comments Via: The Next Web Source: AAP

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AAP reports e-books now account for over 22 percent of US publishers’ revenue

Are you ready for a Game of Thrones prequel TV series?

While HBO wonders what the hell they’re going to do if (or when, more likely) their hit show catches up to the books, the network is already thinking about more Game of Thrones TV — author George R. R. Martin says the network is considering a prequel series, possibly based on his Dunk and Egg short stories, which are set 90 years earlier. Read more…

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Are you ready for a Game of Thrones prequel TV series?

Overseas Hackers Have Been Snatching More Than 1TB of Data Per Day

According to a report obtained by The Verge , analysts from Florida-based Internet security firm Cymru have uncovered a massive foreign hacking enterprise that has somehow managed to steal more than a terabyte of data per day. Confirmed international targets include military and academic facilities in addition to a major search engine, among others. More »

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Overseas Hackers Have Been Snatching More Than 1TB of Data Per Day

Here’s How to See All the Free Kindle Lending Library Books from Your Browser

Amazon’s Lending Library is a great treat for Kindle-owning Prime members: You get nearly 300,000 books to read for free . Browsing the selection on a Kindle is easy enough, but Amazon doesn’t offer a direct link to these titles on its site. To get to it, you need to jump through a little hoop. More »

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Here’s How to See All the Free Kindle Lending Library Books from Your Browser

Project Guttenberg Adds Dropbox Support, Perfect for Syncing to All Your Devices

We’ve shown you how to load up your ereaders with free ebooks , and Project Guttenberg is a great place to do it. Recently, they made accessing their catalog of 42,000 free ebooks that much easier by adding Dropbox integration. More »

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Project Guttenberg Adds Dropbox Support, Perfect for Syncing to All Your Devices

Cryptofloricon: say (whatever) with flowers!

Ed sez, Inspired by traditional Victorian floriography, writer and artist Ed Saperia developed a series of over 200 “flower codes”, allowing you to express anything from a simple romantic gesture (“I adore you”) to a loaded question (“Someone else?”) or even an insult (“Creep!”) using nothing but a few common flowers. “We are a messaging culture, submerged in an endless deluge of communication. Sometimes, though, we are lost for words. This system makes it a little easier to say those difficult things.” An online dictionary and decoder may be found at www.cryptofloricon.com , and if you’re in London from 8th-10th February a pop-up florist near Brick Lane will feature a range of bouquets spelling out the various codes. Boing Boing’s favourite will probably be three carnations, one lily and a gerbera, which translates to “Help, I’m trapped in a florist’s!”. Cryptofloricon ( Thanks, Ed ! )

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Cryptofloricon: say (whatever) with flowers!

These natural formations look like alien ruins

These columns are found in Varna, Bulgaria. They’re hollowed out and filled with sand, almost perfectly round, and grouped together. And they’re 100 percent natural formations. Sometimes even prehistory is in on the conspiracy to make us believe that we’ve discovered evidence of alien visitors. More »

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These natural formations look like alien ruins

You’ve Got 25 Years Until UNIX Time Overflows

CowboyRobot writes “In 25 years, an odd thing will happen to some of the no doubt very large number of computing devices in our world: an old, well-known and well-understood bug will cause their calculation of time to fail. The problem springs from the use of a 32-bit signed integer to store a time value, as a number of seconds since 00:00:00 UTC on Thursday, 1 January 1970, a practice begun in early UNIX systems with the standard C library data structure time_t. On January 19, 2038, at 03:14:08 UTC that integer will overflow. It’s not difficult to come up with cases where the problem could be real today. Imagine a mortgage amortization program projecting payments out into the future for a 30-year mortgage. Or imagine those phony programs politicians use to project government expenditures, or demographic software, and so on. It’s too early for panic, but those of us in the early parts of their careers will be the ones who have to deal with the problem.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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You’ve Got 25 Years Until UNIX Time Overflows

Archaeologists Mistake Viking Brewhouses For Bathhouses

For years, archaeologists studying Viking remnants and artifacts in Britain had assumed that certain stone structures were bathhouses, or a kind of primitive sauna. But a husband-and-wife team has now thrown this thinking into question by suggesting that they weren’t bathhouses at all — that they were brewhouses where the Vikings made their beer. More »

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Archaeologists Mistake Viking Brewhouses For Bathhouses