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A collection of recent photos and writing by yours truly.

Posts Tagged ‘ebooks

Digitizing Books

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The Daily Dish has an interesting article up about the future of books and Google’s effort to digitize them. Andrew Sullivan quotes another writer who wrote of the recent settlement allowing Google to digitize thousands of books that:

No one can predict what will happen. We can only read the terms of the settlement and guess about the future. If Google makes available, at a reasonable price, the combined holdings of all the major US libraries, who would not applaud? Would we not prefer a world in which this immense corpus of digitized books is accessible, even at a high price, to one in which it did not exist?

Perhaps, but the settlement creates a fundamental change in the digital world by consolidating power in the hands of one company.

Here’s the link to the original article that Sullivan pulls from which is also an interesting read although it is quite long.

Written by Andrew

January 24, 2009 at 7:53 pm

Posted in Misc, Technology

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Ebook downside

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Sort of a downside to ebooks: their non-permanent nature. See the link.

Ebook DRM provider goes dark, the books you paid for disappear – Boing Boing

Written by Andrew

January 9, 2009 at 5:28 am

Posted in Misc

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Follow up to Ebooks

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The New York Times has another story up about the future of ebooks and their growing popularity. It also poses the question of maybe consumers have finally become comfortable with putting down paper and picking up plastic. I don’t know, I still can’t buy it. At least this one mentions more products than just the Kindle.

Link (via NY Times).

Written by Andrew

December 24, 2008 at 6:33 pm

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Ebooks?

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Gregory Cowles has a post today over on the New York Times website about how 2008 might be remembered as the year that ebooks finally caught on. He references the popularity (or is it a really low supply?) of products like Amazon’s Kindle as part of the reason behind his thinking this. He concludes by writing of a shift to ereaders:

I think I would have a hard time adapting to that — I live too much in my head already, and enjoy the solid physicality of ink on paper — but then, I’m the kind of guy who would have complained about the end of parchment or chiseled stone too. There’s no stopping the future. “When you get right down to it,” a publisher told me, “the story you’re delivering is always more important than the delivery system you use.”

I’m with Cowles here; no matter how tech-savvy I am and no matter how many wonderful uses I find for technology in my life I will never be able to pick up an electronic copy of a book with the same kind of enthusiasm and feelings as a traditional print copy. I look at apps like Classics for the iPhone and iPod Touch and think that if something this well-designed still can’t make reading books on a display a suitable replacement then I’m not sure anything really will.

Also, I think I disagree with the publisher quoted above. I think that an intriguing story becomes inherently less interesting to me if the medium of presentation is one that I cannot accomodate. I just relate it to whenever I try to edit a friend’s college paper on my computer. No matter how good the paper is it simply does not hold my attention and I don’t read it as thoroughly as I do when I print out a copy. Just my two cents.

Thanks to Andrew Sullivan for the tip on the article.

Written by Andrew

December 24, 2008 at 4:28 am

Posted in Opinion, Technology

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