Quote:
Originally Posted by SoCalReader
Oddly, I find quantum mechanics really not that difficult. 
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Therein lies your problem, you are suffering from uncertainty.
If you were to modify either your speed of your relating to the data available to you or the accuracy of your determination of where it is you would find that you would find the location of the data with a level of accuracy sufficient for the classical world of Maxwell, Einstein, etc., and even of that of Newton, that the rest of us live in.
Of course, for the rest of us, we cast curved balls through space-time to fix the location of the things one needs sufficient for the real world experience. If you were to have thrown such a ball in a search for readers through Amazon's web-space-time and taken a little time about it, rather than just succumbing to quantum uncertainty, you would have found that at least one concept of quantum physics applies in the classical world in that things really can be in two places at once, and that is so without the mental gymnastics and reliance on equations that quantum mechanics requires. (Perhaps there is a lead into a unified theory of everything in that observation?).
Of course, if you threw that same ball at Google you would find that you would be delivered into the world of string theory where one dimensional information can be found in multiple dimensions due to the infinite number of solutions, but there confused by unreliability due to both of multiple opinions and non reliance of those opinions on evidence.
But I have some sympathy with your point in that Amazon's space-time is very warped and unlikely to survive in our dimension in the long term unless they take measures to flatten it (gravitas, perhaps?). I take pains to avoid being trapped into the black hole in its centre by keeping well away from the Kindle event horizon. However, at this time I, using the good advice above, have found no limitations finding how to, and then capturing ebooks from Amazon using the wormhole from my PC into the Amazon dimension using the method they themselves provide (and which routes safely around the Kindle black hole) and then trapping them in my own dimension by applying Alf's disintegration theory and the Calibre reintegration equations.
Trusting this has been of some help, it being presented in a manner of quantum perspective, and that from a position not assuming of the as yet to be unravelled world of 3 year olds.
John