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Old 02-13-2014, 01:52 PM   #63
cfrizz
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Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Quincy, MA
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sirmaru View Post
Old things get lost all the time. My favorite print bible in German from 1930 has decomposing pages. Every time I open it, pieces of pages decompose.

I had great games for my Radio Shack TRS 80 from 1978 but they are now gone forever.

I had even greater games for DOS and they are now gone.

I used to play Mankind, a game for thousands at one time, for several years and it is now gone forever.

My old Microsoft eBooks are gone forever as are my old Sony eBooks now. My old Adobe eBooks are also gone.

All my parents, grandparents, uncles and aunts are also gone.

That is why I only read a book ONCE and never look back. Its possible I may have even read some books twice since I may have forgotten when I read it first.

I never remove DRM because the license for my purchase of that eBook REQUIRED that I leave it in place. I tend to honor licenses on games and eBooks I buy.

Preserving software by some means is also a waste of time. Why would I still want to have a copy of MS DOS 2.2 still available?

My old cars and TV's are also gone forever. Would I really want my old Modal A Ford back to replace my new self driving car?

That is why I only buy an eBook to READ IT and would not dream of "collecting" thousands of old eBooks. They are JUNK after I've read it. Thus, Calibre and Apprentice Alf for me are no better than a defective time machine which never can really function.

Its best to just forget the past and MOVE ON.

By the way, all this DRM removal going on now to store eBooks for future use may be for naught. New eReaders may be introduced at some time which will make all the old eBook files OBSOLETE since the structure of the new eBooks may be totally different.

If someone had made illegal Xerox copies of print books back in 1961, they still could not be read on our eReaders of today.

Removing DRM now for eBooks may be going down the same hopeless road as was taken by those who sought to make illegal hand copies of papyrus books which are all OBSOLETE today.
Good for you, you don't care about your books. But it is pretty clear that some of us do and will do what it takes to keep them.

Now if I have all of my ebooks stripped of drm and they decided that new ereaders won't read it, then I will simply take all of my ebooks reconvert them to RTF or text files and read them on my pc. BUT I WILL STILL HAVE MY BOOKS!

I don't think pc's or ereaders/tablets are going to go away anytime soon. But then again, neither are cd's/vinyl records, cassette tapes etc. Time marches on but so long as we can buy these products or at least the machines that interface with them (and we can!) we are still in business.
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