![]() ![]() The remainder of this paragraph may now be irrelevant. Customers can download a free sample to supported devices, though it’s not nearly as convenient as a Look Inside. The Look Inside is an important selling feature. I published a KTC book on December 18, and on December 19 it had its own Look Inside on Amazon’s website (FYI: there is no print edition, and it has no ISBN). Update: As of December, 2015, KTC published books are beginning to generate automatic Look Insides. No Look Inside is available for e-textbooks created using the Kindle Textbook Creator.Presently, they are only supported on third-generation Kindle Fire tablets. Audio and video features are not yet fully supported.The Kindle Textbook Creator does not support e-Ink devices, such as Kindle DX and Paperwhite.First and second generation Kindle Fire: maybe (these formats are listed on my product page, but again, they don’t show up in the preview).Smartphones: maybe (Kindle for iPhone and Kindle for Android Phone are listed on my product page, but these options were removed from the Kindle Textbook Creator’s preview, so they may not be available for all e-textbooks made this way).E-textbooks created using the Kindle Textbook Creator are only supported on limited devices:.Most of your images you probably want to show on the page rather than to pop-up, but if for some reason you want to insert an image file and have the image pop-up, that is possible now. A new feature recently added is an image pop-up.Audio and video clips can be added into the e-textbook using the Kindle Textbook Creator.You can add navigation to your PDF file so that Kindle devices will have a working table of contents on the device (but not a clickable table of contents in the e-textbook).Pinch-and-zoom is what makes the Kindle Textbook Creator viable. This is a necessity when text or images wouldn’t be readable on the screen, which is possible, since the screen size may be much smaller than the page size of the printed textbook. The e-book will support pinch-and-zoom.There is even the potential for flashcards. For example, if you highlight a word on the screen, the device will pull up windows for a dictionary, Wikipedia, and even translation. Students can highlight text, make notes, and use similar features that are very handy with e-textbooks.In my experience, images can come out nice and sharp, much better than converting each page to an image (but you need good quality to begin with). The device will recognize the text on each page, which would never happen in an image. The structure of each page is preserved, which preserves the complex design and layout of most textbooks, yet it’s much better than just converting every page to a picture. The output is amazingly good for starting from a PDF file (usually, PDF is the worst file to begin with to create an e-book, but this is an exception).Many e-textbooks don’t sell frequently enough to warrant weeks of work on the e-book conversion (or paying a hefty fee to have the conversion done for you). (Unlike conventional Kindle e-books, PDF actually converts very well in this context.) The alternative, converting a complex layout with rich formatting into a reflowable e-book, is very tedious and time-consuming. You put a PDF in and very quickly get a Kindle-friendly e-book out. Here are the benefits of using the Kindle Textbook Creator to format an e-textbook: (Update: That may change soon, as KTC published books are beginning to generate automatic Look Insides.) If you want to explore the Kindle e-textbook, download the free sample to a device, or download the free sample with one of the Kindle apps (like Kindle for PC) you’ll get the best experience with a Kindle Fire HD.īut remember, your book won’t look quite the same unless you take similar steps to optimize your file before publishing. Note that the Look Inside shows the paperback edition. If you would like to see an example of an e-textbook created using the Kindle Textbook Creator, feel free to check out my trigonometry e-book and see how it looks. Later in this article, I will show you exactly how I did this. ![]() I spent a little time modifying my file in order to optimize it for the Kindle Textbook Creator. I did more than simply upload my print PDF to the Kindle Textbook Creator. I recently published my trigonometry book, Learn or Review Trigonometry: Essential Skills, using the Kindle Textbook Creator. However, books that primarily consist of paragraphs of text, such as novels, function best as a simple conversion following Amazon’s free guide, Building Your Book for Kindle.) (Illustrated children’s e-books work better with another free tool, the Kindle Kids’ Book Creator, and comic books work best with the free Kindle Comic Creator. Amazon’s new free tool, the Kindle Textbook Creator, is very convenient for e-textbooks and other e-books with rich formatting and complex layouts.
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