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COMPUTING

From...
PC World

Create your own virtual books

July 2, 1999
Web posted at: 5:27 p.m. EDT (2127 GMT)

by Eileen Doherty Smith
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(IDG) -- Not so long ago, people just like you and me read books and wrote out the occasional prose on lily-white paper bound crisply in journals.

Are you feeling a little nostalgic? Last week KeeBoo unveiled software that lets you create your own virtual books, for free.

While other online companies may use the book metaphor, KeeBoo's build-your-own approach is unique, says Chief Executive Officer Michel Safars. "We're trying to solve the problem of people who want to communicate easily," Safars says, suggesting an alternative to constructing personal Web pages.

A book look

You need to have a PC with at least a Pentium-200 processor, 32MB of memory, and 30MB of hard drive space available, plus Internet Explorer 4.01. The software takes roughly five minutes to download. Before you can get started, you need to provide your name, e-mail address, Zip code, birthday, and gender. KeeBoo uses this registration information for demographic purposes but declares that it will be kept private.

After registering, I jumped on KeeBoo's 4-minute instructional tour, which provides a play-by-play overview of how to create, organize, and personalize a book, all set to groovy background music.

The book interface is familiar and easy to grasp. The software can read 200 file formats, letting you combine standard documents, multimedia clips, and your favorite Web pages with the simple click of a mouse. KeeBoo automatically inserts and updates a table of contents, and divides the book into chapters. Books are shelved in the library, which is kept on your hard drive and holds up to 150 books.

To add a more personal touch, editing tools complete with virtual highlighter pen and electronic Post-it notes are at your disposal. As I fiddled with the book motif, dropping in text and highlighting it, I had the eerie feeling that I was working on a term paper. But KeeBoo offers up book ideas ranging from baby photo albums to somewhat sophisticated financial reports.

KeeBoo plans to generate revenue by selling corporate versions; it will announce partners for this effort.

Have book, will travel

Why create such a fine masterpiece of a book and keep it to yourself? You can e-mail it to friends and family around the world, since all they need to view the book is a standard Web browser such as Microsoft Internet Explorer or Netscape Navigator. The book can be virtually any size, depending on hard drive capacity.

You can achieve some of the same results with the personal-page offerings from Web portals; independent sites like Homestead; or family-friendly services such as eCircles. But KeeBoo's publish-it-yourself books are an interesting take on taming the vast wilderness of the Web. And you don't even need a library card.


RELATED STORIES:
Microsoft banks on ClearType to spur electronic books
June 18, 1999
Microsoft pushes electronic book standard
May 28, 1999
More e-books, more ways
May 11, 1999

RELATED IDG.net STORIES:
Homestead's best Web editor yet
(PC World Online)
Join hands in eCircles
(PC World Online)
Microsoft bets on electronic books
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eCircles
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