June 19th, 2008

Recent Activity, BG Style
This new homepage inset lets you keep track of the most-recent books read, groups formed and comments made. It’s more compact so you can peruse all the homepage info quickly and easily. Also - it has those fancy new tabs.
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June 11th, 2008

BookGlutton Profiles - See What I “Recently Read” Detail
Check out the new Profile Pages - you’ll see what people have been reading. Naturally, if you set your preferences to “Read in Private,” you’ll be able to keep this a secret (that’s in the Account Section, btw) But why would you want to read alone? Following what people have been reading really helps connect. It’s also super addictive.
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June 10th, 2008

BookGlutton Refreshes the Homepage
Good news - we’ve been making some slick new changes to the site. When you get a chance try out the new Search. And dig around in the Profiles a bit - it should be a lot easier to find other people to read with now, especially since people’s friendlists are more transparent and we’ve got the site listing who the last reader was next to each book.
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June 6th, 2008

Here’s A Larger Image of the New Chat
Every time we get a chance we make the chat a little better. Now there’s a roster to see who’s in the book with you. It’s represented by that little guy in the upper right corner of the TALK panel, along with the number of people in the book with you. Clicking on that will give you a list - a roster - which shows you who else is in your book.
In the roster you’ll also be able to see who can hear you (dark text) and those can’t (grey text), — people who limit their scope to chapters that you’re not in will see grey. You’ll also notice a presence icon at the top of the screen, which quickly lets you know if you’re connected or not.
You’ll also find the chat less buggy overall, due to plenty of upgrades behind-the-scenes. Find someone to read a book with and try it out!
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June 2nd, 2008

Startup Schwag 8
We’re excited to be included in Startup Schwag’s mailing for May (officially their eighth mailing). If you’re not familiar with it, Startup Schwag is a kind of web2.0 teeshirt-of-the-month club. They also send out stickers, which is what their subscribers got from BookGlutton last month. It’s a great snapshot of web culture and an honor to be included.
BTW - stay tuned for some big site updates over the next two weeks. We’ve been burning the midnight oil and we’re super pleased with the results.
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May 22nd, 2008

You ask and we deliver - you can now get some BookGlutton gear from CafePress - printed on demand at www.cafepress.com/bookglutton.
BTW, they’re priced nearly at cost and ship all over the place. Don’t you want to tell the world what a BookGlutton you are?
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May 20th, 2008
We’ve made the first round of huge improvements on our recently released EPUB conversion API. Now you can upload either a plain HTML file or a Zip Archive and get back an EPUB with images, stylesheets and nested HTML or XML documents.
The converter also supports a host of new options including setting rights information, descriptions, language and more. Output is now nicely formatted by default, so you can more easily edit the results if you want. Image formats supported are JPEG, GIF, PNG and SWF. External CSS stylesheets are supported as well.
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May 10th, 2008

Heads up - now you can easily see how people are connected on the site!
See who’s been added as a friend, as well as who’s following whom, on each Profile page. Naturally you can click on any of these Glutton Profile Images and hook up with new readers. Try it and see.
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May 8th, 2008

We’re happy to announce the first tool in our own API series, the BookGlutton Epub Converter. It’s a simple way to create the IDPF’s open ebook format, ePub, from basic HTML files. The REST-like interface allows developers to do conversions from anywhere on the Web, be it a backend script or a frontend form for their users. The curious can play with the tool on our site, where we’ve put up some documentation and a test form.
Now, I know I’ve voiced concerns about the ePub format before, so at first glance it wouldn’t make sense for me to build a tool which creates more of it. The short explanation is that if we make this format accessible to independent, open-source Web developers and tech-savvy Web readers and writers, a collective outcry may have more sway in future renditions of it. So please, create some ePubs with this. If you’re curious about the internal XML workings of the format, rename your epub with a .zip extension, unzip it, and open the files up in your favorite text editor. Then ask yourself how the format could be improved for you, and tell the IDPF what you think.
We’re committed to being open and we hope that developers in the online book community will not only want to use the tools we develop, but will also feel encouraged to develop their own. As always, we welcome suggestions. Developers out there: what services or data would you like to see us make accessible to your own sites? Users: what tools might make reading online easier and more fun? Let us know!
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May 7th, 2008

Here’s a screenshot of BookGlutton’s new “Featured Author” section, which can be found right on the homepage. We’ve introduced this area to highlight contemporary authors that have uploaded original work or excerpts of published pieces to the site. It’s a great way to discover something new to read!
Keep an eye out for this - we’ll be cycling it frequently.
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May 6th, 2008
Some of you may have noticed that you can’t change your nickname. We noticed that too. There’s actually a good reason for that. We want you all to have a unique and permanent space here on BG. To do that you need to be able to carve it out, so to speak, and not change it.
That said, I know some of our super early users may have been saddled with ambiguous nicknames - we weren’t really good about explaining the Importance of the Nickname. In fact, a few of you have been permanently labeled “anonymous gluttons.” If this sounds like you, we’ll be glad to alter your account with the nickname of your choosing. Just contact us via our email form and we’ll take care of it, PDQ.
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May 1st, 2008

Last week BG staked-out a spot on Facebook. If you’re a Facebook aficionado, hook up with us there.
You’ll get feeds from this blog, notifications about who’s-reading-what, and some Facebook-only information. There’s also a photo section full of screenshots of some of the odd and interesting Catalog entries, designed to whet your digital literary appetite.
http://www.facebook.com/pages/BookGlutton/15299777141?ref=mf
And a note to the non-Facebook crowd - you can probably still see the page. It’s still worth checking out, even if you can’t friend us. 
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April 30th, 2008

BookGlutton Groups on Twitter
One of the best things about following BookGlutton’s Twitter Stream: you can see when a group is reading.
If someone decides to read with a group, the group name shows up on BG’s Twitter page: http://www.twitter.com/bookglutton. Then you can jump in and chat with them about the book in a group-only setting. You can also keep an eye out for the groups that meet frequently and request an invite…it’s another great way to keep track of BG activity.
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April 29th, 2008

Find out what people are doing on BookGlutton! If you’re not familiar with Twitter, it’s a free service that sends short, immediate messages to a webpage, so you can stay in touch. Think of it as a mini-blog. Every time someone opens a book on BookGlutton.com, our robots automatically update BookGlutton’s Twitter page: http://www.twitter.com/bookglutton.
If you’re not logged in to BookGlutton when you read, or if you’ve chosen to read in private (under Manage Your Account > Personal Information), the Twitter stream will just say “Someone” is reading. Otherwise, keep an eye out for your friends nickames. Those will appear here, and you can jump back onto BookGlutton and join them. It’s pretty addictive!
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April 28th, 2008

We just got some great news: FindingDulcinea, Librarian of the Internet, is featuring BookGlutton today on their homepage as part of their daily “Site Spotlight” feature, where they recommend one interesting, new or useful Web site that they love every weekday. Read the “Site Spotlight” here: BookGlutton on FindingDulcinea.com
Cool. And for all you literary folks out here, Dulcinea was Don Quixote’s paramour, and the force behind the search that gave his life meaning.
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