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Old 11-08-2009, 04:54 PM   #135
Harmon
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Quote:
Originally Posted by eGeezer View Post
While only time (and actual ownership) will tell, his notion of pbook/ebook partnering holds little interest for me. My intent is to clear my shelves of books and keep it that way. I would have no interest in ebooks which require me buy the companion pbook, which I would never open.
I would have such an interest. I'm a "place reader." That is, I tend to have books located in places where I anticipate reading, & read them when I am there. By my chair. By the bed. In my briefcase. By my coatrack at work. In the smallest room in the house. I could very easily buy a pbook and an ebook of the same book, and read it in paper form or on one of my ereaders, moving back & forth between them.

Quote:
His observation of the ereading device as mainly a "travel" object is certainly accurate to a point. Many people have stated how great it is to not have to take 5 pbooks on a trip -- only to find they needed a 6th. But I anticipate falling asleep with my ereading device in my hands -- whether in bed, or on the sofa -- as well as being with me on vacation. (Being retired, I don't travel much for business, unless it is the monkey kind). I fully expect it will travel in my backpack on hikes, and will be with me while car-camping and on flights. Although, it might be too tempting to use it to bean some rude wannabecop TSA employee at the security bottleneck.
Yeah, travel seem to be the common denominator. I wonder if someone will figure out how to exploit that, affirmatively, rather than as a by product of the essential portability of ereaders.
Quote:
His comparison of ebooks and audio books is a little off, however, since the mediums and uses are different. Because Olympus agrees with my original assumption on pbook/ebook costs, I will quote him here:
I wouldn't say entirely differnent. I'd say they overlap. The travel thing.

Quote:
I do agree heartily with him that ebooks may well be a niche for many years to come, but the niche will be much larger -- perhaps as big as a nook (hee hee) or an alcove. Perhaps ebooks will take over the market some day, but not any time soon. After all, TV did not erase radio, and TV has pictures. (Yeah, I know. You don't hear any radio versions of CSI or Masterpiece Theatre, which just means each has found its purpose in life.)
Good analogy, and one which is obvious, once it's pointed out, Holmes.
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