Wiktionary
n. (context science fiction English) A digital or electronic equivalent of a book.
Usage examples of "cyberbook".
His social life consisted of an occasional lunch with Lori, or a dinner with Scarlet Dean, who insisted on being kept up-to-date on the Cyberbooks project.
Then I could present the Cyberbooks concept as my own to the board of directors.
The Cyberbooks project had reached the point where they could brief the sales force.
Y'see, what you're doing with this Cyberbooks idea, basically, is asking the sales force to learn a whole new way of doing their job.
If I understand the way Cyberbooks is going to work, we're going to be selling directly to the customer.
They can phone New York when a customer asks for a Cyberbook and we can transmit it to them instantly, electronically.
The techniques might change, the system may be altered, but your jobs will be just as important to this company with Cyberbooks as before.
How do you think the wholesalers are gonna behave when they see us going around them with the Cyberbooks, huh?
Take their money and then go to Japan and start a Cyberbooks company there.
You help me bring Cyberbooks to life and I'll help you get your novel published.
She waited for Woody's whoops to die down, then said, "Don't you go telling anybody what we were saying about the Cyberbooks idea.
We gotta make her see that if she tries to market Cyberbooks it'll ruin the company.
The other editors and most of the sales force were up in arms over the Cyberbooks project.
Hunched in front of his own computer display screen in the workshop/office he had made out of the apartment the Bunkers were paying for, Carl traced out the circuitry for an improved Cyberbook model that would reduce the costs of the hand-held reader by at least ten percent.
Bunker in a program of giving away a few hundred thousand Cyberbook readers to the children of urban ghettos.