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Old 02-23-2009, 08:40 AM   #228
Steven Lyle Jordan
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pilotbob View Post
I used to save magazines... but I realized I never ever went back to them. So, they ended up in the recycle bin. I basically cut down to 0 mag subs now. I can read most of that stuff on line. I mostly subscribed to programming and PC mags.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jellby View Post
In research and academy I believe paper subscriptions to journals are dying, we are seeing them more and more being replaced by some kind of internet access...

But with a paper journal you can have a quick glance at the articles, watch the graphs and figures, read the titles and maybe find something interesting unexpectedly. With electronic access you mostly only find what you search, so in a way something is lost...
I go back to my magazines regularly, especially to find references to technology or ideas that I may use in a future novel (something I'm doing now for my next one, in fact).

That's why I hope to eventually see an electronic "scrapbook" device that easily and efficiently saves entire issues of magazines or specific articles and "scraps" like photos, blurbs, links, etc... order them according to your customized folders, and access them whenever you like. (It'll probably be essentially a tablet PC...)

Yes, Indigo, there is always the threat of something happening to your data. But print books are subject to fire damage, water damage, age damage, theft and just plain loss... I'd say both threats can be minimized with adequate planning and care, and I wouldn't consider it enough of a reason not to go electronic.
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