Poll
The Goodreads Librarians are wondering how we would like to handle "pagination" of audiobooks.
So, if you had your way, how would the length of an audiobook be measured by goodreads? (For status updates, record-keeping, etc. purposes.)
Please comment!
So, if you had your way, how would the length of an audiobook be measured by goodreads? (For status updates, record-keeping, etc. purposes.)
Please comment!
Number of hours
Number of equivalent pages
Number of discs
Number of minutes
Number of chapters
Other (please comment)
Poll added by: Sara ♥
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Patty
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Aug 05, 2009 09:31AM

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Number of pages in a representative paperback edition, divided by the number of hours in the audiobook. For instance. I am currently down to the last hour of "Pillars of the Earth" which is 975 pages or ~41 hours long. I've read 39 hours and 52 minutes. I'll call that 39.75 for ease of use, and because the page count is about 23.8 pph, I know I've read about 946 pages (which by the way feels REALLY good because it's a total doorstop.)It's not absurdly precise, but it works for me. This might be very easy to work into a simple formula for updating page count. It would save me a bit of math! Hope that helps!!

As for number of pages from a corresponding book, I personally have no idea how many pages there are in any version of the books I buy directly on audio, since I don't own a paper copy of the book.
I think that hours/minutes into the audio file would work well.

I see a few problems....
Using page numbers--you really can't b/c there are so many versions--hardcover, paperback, movie tie-in, etc.
Using discs--what if you get your copy from Overdrive or Audible? You don't get discs then (I think you get tracks?) And, some audio pubs put their products on regular CDs AND MP3-CD. MP3-CD usually corresponds to 1-2 discs per book. Playaways are an entirely different field, too.
Using hours or minutes--again, if you are using discs (be they regular CDs or MP3-CDs) you start over at 0:00 every time you switch discs.
Question: Would the various types of editions be reflected in the GR library? Such as CD, MP3-CD, digital download, Playaway, etc?
If yes, then we would need something that would work with all formats--probably chapter?

"Hours" for the disks/files where the chapters aren't clear (like where the book is just one unbookmarked track), and chapters for the properly marked/split files.
I think that would cover all formats?
Maybe use 'Hours' like:
/whole hour
/hour + 15 mins
/hour + 30 mins
/hour + 45 mins
=of total.
I personally don't need to use minutes.
I think corresponding book page numbers will really not work, it's what I'm doing now, and it's always a really random guess.

I was thinking primarily as a Goodreads librarian in that "discs" doesn't work for, say, an Audible "original" book where all there is, and ever will be, is a time-length. For librarian purposes, books-on-disc give the total length on the box. Over Drive gives total time as well for that purpose.
As far as stating "current progress" with disc-books, one can approximate a disc as slightly over an hour, so for example I'd state my progress at nearly halfway through disc 3 of a book at 160 (ish) minutes.
I have three mp3 players (two Cowons and a Creative), and they way books are loaded onto them (both ripped and downloads), I have little trouble figuring out where I am in the book in terms of time length.

Minutes or discs don't have meaning to my Goodreads visual reader friends, so I stick to the common language of pages. When I post my page status for aural reads, I usually just do a quick search for a phrase on the page I stopped on via the Amazon.com online "look inside" book. Goodreads can be set up to display the Amazon link directly below the book and then it's just a click to go directly to it and the inside the book search function.
Frankly, I don't care if I get the exact page for the correct edition. My page status is just a signal to my Goodreads friends about where I am in the book and encourages me that I'm making progress - particularly in books that are 30 to 40 hours long.
Have fun puzzling this out. I look forward to reading the discussion and seeing what you come up with.

I wonder if the current page number slot on a book will allow decimals... (That way we can have partial hours.)
EDIT: That's a no on the decimals.

http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1...
rivka wrote: "Can you please clarify that the options are EXCLUSIVE, we can't use two? Also that this is a temporary workaround, until the percentage-complete option is added. That is, we will still be using the current "number of pages" field for right now."
So whatever we decide on will need to be put into the existing page number slot. The text box is set to only accept an integer value, so we'd have to round to the nearest hour if we went that way.
(I'm not sure how I feel about the percentage complete thing... seems like too much calculating...)

When creating the Playaway edition on GR, I type the title field as:
The Title (Playaway digital audio player) (X chapters, y hours z minutes)
Then, I tell the Pages field how many chapters the book has.
For CDs, which disc I'm on is easy and is detailed enough for me. Tbh, why would you need to tell everyone down to the last page, if it makes it so complicated ?


"
Thanks! It's a little labor intensive, but I like knowing where I'm at. It works out.





Whichever option we go for, it's useful to have some sort of measure available, so if you're thinking of listening to an audiobook, you have an idea of how long it will be.
I only start with shorter audiobooks as I know I will get bored of a longer one, long before I would have a hope of finishing it.

If it is a CD - both the number of discs and the hours (just like you would see on the box).
Abridged vs. unabridged and CD vs. MP3-CD should be noted somewhere too.
Download = hours or percent maybe. I don't do downloads yet so I'm not sure the best way.


David - I find both audible and my public library (for downloads) give the book length to the minute; CD boxes are often less exact I agree.

Whichever option we go for, it's useful to have some sort of measure available, so if you're thinking of listening to an audiobook, you have an idea of how long it will be.
I on..."
Andrew - for long books I usually put them "on hiatus" partway through, switching to "something completely different" (as they'd say on Monty Python), and come back to the original book after that. For really long books (Dickens), I've been known to break it into thirds!

I listen to versions, too, that aren't on goodreads - when I've created librivox 'editions' of audio books, they've been merged, so an update on my progress in hours and minutes would be meaningless measured against another edition's total hours and minutes.
Then there's the occasional book with no chapters.
Honestly, there may not be a great way. I have to say I don't do the mid-book updates thing anyway, so my input shouldn't be weighed to heavily.

The trouble is I never come back to them !

I by the way listen to Audible, CD rips, merged tracks and "PDF-> MP3" converted files.
I created a separate bookshelf for my audiobooks, but a checkbox for "audio format" would work as well.

And of course, you can include more detail in the update comment, if needed.


I use a method that works well for me for downloads or for CD audio books. I use the minutes total or CD count of the book, then figure the percent the minutes or CD's I have listened to represent, and then apply that percent to the page count of any edition. That tells me approximately how many "pages" I have listened to for my regular status updates. After I complete an audio book, I post my final status in pages as complete, then switch the edition to the audio book, edit my review and shelve the book as read. I just did that last night for The Bonesetter's Daughter.
I would like to be able to update my status as I read "as an audio book", but have worked around that successfully. I often just shelve the audio books separately so that even if I didn't switch the edition, I know which ones they are. I listen to about twenty audio books a year, mostly on my commute.

However, this is entirely dependent on my format, and I think there should be a time measurement for those listening to downloads, etc.

If you are planning to use this field for other things as well then the above method may or may not work well and in this case I am thinking percentage would be the most relevant to all formats. However, figuring out the percentage could be a pain in the butt for the user.




I'm asking particularly because I'm listing an audio CD version of a book onto the site now and want to know what to put in the Number of Pages box.
Based on the poll, I'm assuming 9 hours. I've listed the title as
The Undercover Scientist (9 discs, 9 hours)


For books on discs (which is primarily what I listen to), I've been adding a line in the description like, "An unabridged recording on 6 CDs (7 hours, 2 minutes), read by So N. So." so that if we are ever able to give a more detailed length, the data will be there already to grab, and I won't have to go back and see EXACTLY how long each book was.

Rather than "read by So-and-So", the system is set up to add a second "author" with a role of "narrator" (or "reader"); that way, one can (theoretically) search the site for a specific narrator. If there are multiple audios listed, I try to specify which are abridged in the description, too; I'm not so interested in time, but I see your point there.
John


# John is saying pages = discs (for CD)
# Sara is saying pages = hours (for everything)
Help !! ;-)


"Unabridged - 14 hours"
"begin description text here ...."


This then reads as "Audio CD, 5 hours", just before the description.

I would imagine that discs may go the way of the cassette before long... The music industry says sales of CD's have all but vanished. I've never even had an audiobook on CD, so the disc number wouldn't mean anything to me. But no matter what form the audio is on the length by hour/minute remains a constant and is equal to all.

The problem with chapters is that some chapters are very long and others, very short. Some off the history books I've read recently have chapters that seem more like sections. And isn't it James Patterson who uses chapters the way other authors use two blank rows? (some of his chapters are less than a page long--remembered from my reading days)