12-07-2006, 04:17 AM | #16 |
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My blessings to all those deeply in love!
Maybe I should get one when I swing by US next month! ... then I can feel some love too! |
12-07-2006, 01:17 PM | #17 | |
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12-07-2006, 02:01 PM | #18 |
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I've bought all his books in paper/hardback and have acquired e-books of them. As and when they hit the connect store I'll happily re-buy them.
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12-08-2006, 01:06 PM | #19 |
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I have all my Pratchett books in audio format. Listening to the narrator's different voices adds to the enjoyment.
I am madly in love with my Reader. Now that I have my 1 gig memory stick I can carry a thousand books around in my purse. |
12-08-2006, 05:20 PM | #20 |
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My relationship with my reader has also been passionate. Spin was a inspiring. Freakanomics was funny. Short stories by Han Jin were thought provoking. Now its breaking my heart with the Kite Runner.
It is easy on the eyes and the envy of most who see it. It only only when we are alone and I have to play with the Connect software that the deep dark underbelly of the beast reveals itself. None the less, I forgive it its inevitable failings. Last week I fed it a 2gb SD card that I picked up for $25 and the honeymoon continues. For those of you who can't find Pratchett at the Connect store, search online. A lot of his books are floating around as rtf and html. |
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12-09-2006, 05:53 PM | #21 | |
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Usually a beast has a white underbelly with a dark back . This one has a dark underbelly with your greenbacks. |
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12-10-2006, 07:50 AM | #22 |
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Well, today, I had my first real trial of my Reader. I flew from the East Coast of the US to Japan. My flight was 14 hours. I read Next cover to cover (so to speak) and listened to music for about one hour. I had the Reader on almost the entire flight, yet I still have all four bars of battery life left.
Also, it was very easy on the eyes. I used the airplane light and, sometimes, when I turned off the airplane light, I used a book light. I had been reading on my Treo, but now I realize how unpleasant that was. I still have books on my Treo that I want to read. I am not looking forward to going back to that at all. Betty |
12-10-2006, 09:23 AM | #23 |
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Could you explain what you mean by a "book light", Betty? I'd be interested in a "lighting solution" for the Reader, if anyone has any specific recommendations!
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12-10-2006, 01:16 PM | #24 |
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I use this:
http://www.amazon.com/EVEFNL2BU1CS-L...ffice-products It's the best one I've used and I've tried 3 from that lightwedge company. |
12-10-2006, 01:20 PM | #25 |
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Thanks William - that looks excellent. I'll have to look around and see if there's something similar available in the UK.
Many thanks for the helpful recommendation. |
12-10-2006, 03:03 PM | #26 |
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This thread might also be of interest to you, HarryT.
I've purchased books from the UK Amazon in the past that they've been only too happy to ship here, perhaps the US Amazon would ship there, if it's worth the shipping cost to you. It was very amusing to me to be able to purchase, receive and read Anne McCaffrey's The Skies of Pern a full month before it even released here in the US. As an added bonus I like the UK cover art better than the US version too. |
12-10-2006, 11:39 PM | #27 |
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NatCh, did the book use American spelling or British spelling?
Last year, I read an SF novel by a UK author which was released through an American publisher, and someone had run it through a US spellchecker. However, it had a certain amount of UK idioms. It was like reading two dialects at once, which was jarring times. On a good note, it was the first time I've seen a publisher do this in the 100+ UK novels I've read in my lifetime. |
12-11-2006, 12:00 AM | #28 |
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The spellings weren't anything that I considered unusual, but I don't really notice 'british' spelling anymore.
Ms. McCaffrey may be a special case, however -- she's originally from Maine (if I recall correctly) and moved to the UK as an adult. She also has a huge readership in the US, and I don't know if she writes separate US and UK versions, per se. I'd guess not, but it's a flat out guess. |
12-11-2006, 02:42 AM | #29 | |
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Many British books are "Americanized" (if there is such a word) for the US market; it can be quite distracting when reading an obviously British book to come across American expressions. A good example is the "Harry Potter" books - they are (obviously) British in origin, but are specifically edited for the American market for their US editions - "car park" becomes "parking lot", "letter box" becomes "mail slot", "trainers" becomes "sneakers", etc. It's also quite common for books to have their titles changed for different markets - sometimes for legal reasons; other times for cultural ones. Again, using the Harry Potter books as an example, the British "HP and the Philosopher's Stone" became "HP and the Sorceror's Stone" for the US version of both the book and the subsequent film. Last edited by HarryT; 12-11-2006 at 02:44 AM. |
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12-11-2006, 03:48 AM | #30 | |
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It also might be a difference in learning styles. On the visual/verbal scale, I'm decidedly visual, so the differences between UK and US spellings are more noticable. Also, I'm an above-average speller (probably in the top 10%), so maybe that's why I notice it more. |
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