Quote:
Originally Posted by JAcheson
Engadget has a story about the US Navy's new eReader device, which is a locked-down eInk device containing a static library of books:
http://www.engadget.com/2014/05/07/navy-e-reader/
It's hardly attractive to me, but if I were serving on a ship with no other source of reading material, it would be a lot better than nothing. I wonder if it is waterproofed?
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My library has something similar. You can check out an e-reader or ipad, but they are locked down such that the books on there and apps are pre-loaded. You can see what books are on each reader before checking out the device (they have several kindles and an ipad). There are two kindles dedicated to YA, one for mystery, one for general reading and I think the other is sci/fi/fantasy. They buy the books from Amazon for the library but can swap them out. So there is only 20 or so loaded at a given time, but they aren't necessarily the same 20 all the time.
I don't dare check any of the devices out because if something happens to the device, you have to pay for it, along with a recovery fee. My library has a recovery fee of 7 dollars per lost/destroyed book (on top of the price of the book itself). I don't even want to know what their idea of a recovery fee is for something electronic!