|  01-04-2010, 08:39 PM | #16 | |
| FT Parent PT Reader            Posts: 322 Karma: 187838 Join Date: Mar 2009 Location: South Alabama Device: Shocked by how much I've read on an iPod Touch received as a gift! | Quote: Correction $2.99, several of the others are $4.99 and I mixed that up. Last edited by pking36330; 01-05-2010 at 09:17 AM. | |
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|  01-05-2010, 12:06 AM | #17 | |
| King of the Bongo Drums            Posts: 1,632 Karma: 5927225 Join Date: Feb 2009 Device: Excelsior! (Strange...) | Quote: 
 I'd like to see how it works, but I can't imagine that I'd care for videos. I generally don't watch them when they are linked to things I'm reading on the internet. I don't have the patience to watch videos. The great thing about reading is that you can read slowly or quickly, & vary the tempo as you go along. Reading is interactive, viewing is not. | |
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|  01-05-2010, 03:53 AM | #18 | |
| I see Russia!            Posts: 205 Karma: 234787 Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: Alaska Device: Etch-A-Sketch | Quote: 
 Maybe we should think of it like a modern DVD or Blueray movie. Sure I can view it the standard way as most do, simply the movie, but every now and again it's fun and informative to turn on some of those fancy special features. Things such as director and actor commentary, behind the scenes, deleted scenes, alternative endings, artwork, etc. Then again I do tend to embrace new technologies with open arms. I do agree with you though, I like to concentrate on a book while I read. I would most likely get a Vook style offering as my second read through of a story (if all it simply had were links and video). We all know reading a book twice always reveals more than we caught the first time, I imagine with an interactive style I might be treated to even more. | |
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|  01-05-2010, 11:13 AM | #19 | 
| Connoisseur      Posts: 65 Karma: 456 Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: Toronto Device: Kobo | 
			
			You know, I would love a Vook cook book. See the dish as it's made. Or a tech book. I think my poor experience with the Sherlock Holmes book has to do with my concentration levels. I'm a bad multi-tasker. I need to be doing one thing; if I'm reading, I'm reading.  I enjoy books because of the total immersion and the concentrated reading time. | 
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|  01-05-2010, 11:18 AM | #20 | |
| eBook Enthusiast            Posts: 85,560 Karma: 93980341 Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: UK Device: Kindle Oasis 2, iPad Pro 10.5", iPhone 6 | Quote: 
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|  01-05-2010, 11:30 AM | #21 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 2,409 Karma: 4132096 Join Date: Sep 2008 Device: Kindle Paperwhite/iOS Kindle App | 
			
			I don't think I would mind as long as I could turn the extra features off, but I would not like it on the iPod Touch environment because I don't want to make each book its own app. I would rather have an ebook reader app (like eReader) where I can load in multiple files. I have over 500 books on my Sony reader and that many 'apps' would not fit on the iPod. I think it is inefficient. I did look some stuff up in Wikipedia recently when I was reading Sherlock Holmes stuff. I don't normally use a dictionary when I read in English, but I can see how one who reads classics might have a need. For example, if you were a younger reader who did not know what a telegram was since that is not a technology really in use anymore, you may need to look that up. I had to look up 'hansom' and 'brougham.' I got that they were both kinds of carriages, but I wasn't sure what the difference was (and the pronunciation of 'brougham' was not at all what I thought it was). I think I am a fairly educated reader (my university degree is in Literature and I read a lot, so I think I am fairly well-read, but with the classics some extra background can be helpful sometimes. Still, every book as an app would not work for me. They would need to change it so it's more like the eReader app where you have ONE app and you can get many files to use WITH it. | 
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|  01-05-2010, 11:35 AM | #22 | 
| Enjoying the show....            Posts: 14,270 Karma: 10462843 Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: Arizona Device: A K1, Kindle Paperwhite, an Ipod, IPad2, Iphone, an Ipad Mini & macAir | |
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|  01-05-2010, 11:38 AM | #23 | 
| eBook Enthusiast            Posts: 85,560 Karma: 93980341 Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: UK Device: Kindle Oasis 2, iPad Pro 10.5", iPhone 6 | 
			
			I'm afraid I can't see the difference. Are the annotations in a printed edition of an annotated Sherlock Holmes not equally "chosen for you" by the annotator? In both cases, you have the choice of whether or not to read them - in the book, read the annotation side-bar or not; in the app, click the hyperlink or not.
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|  01-05-2010, 12:41 PM | #24 | |
| FT Parent PT Reader            Posts: 322 Karma: 187838 Join Date: Mar 2009 Location: South Alabama Device: Shocked by how much I've read on an iPod Touch received as a gift! | Quote: 
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|  01-05-2010, 03:37 PM | #25 | 
| Junior Member  Posts: 5 Karma: 10 Join Date: Dec 2008 Device: prs-505 | 
				
				On the whole, too much of the wrong stuff.
			 
			
			The additions strike me as original content.    It could be an organic "mash-up" -- sort of Sherlock Holmes and the Adventure of the Dancing Men and Zombies, as it were.  That might be lovely.  But it's not Arthur Conan Doyle, and it shouldn't be advertised as such. Having stated that, I think a case could be made for annotation. I was very fond of my thoroughly-annotated Oxford Shakespeare, when I was at University. Brevity was the beauty of those footnotes. They told me what I needed to know to understand the play, and nothing else. That's a specific function, and one not performed by a dictionary (which would tell me that a nunnery is where nuns live) or Wikipedia (which would open to me the vast richness of Elizabethan slang, not to mention brothels). Something between the two is useful (maybe even necessary). | 
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|  01-06-2010, 12:10 PM | #26 | 
| FT Parent PT Reader            Posts: 322 Karma: 187838 Join Date: Mar 2009 Location: South Alabama Device: Shocked by how much I've read on an iPod Touch received as a gift! | 
			
			I'm pretty sure that one of the few Vooks available on iTunes is a cookbook. Let us know if you like it better if you give it a try. I tend to agree that a cookbook would be a very logical interactive candidate over a Sherlock Holmes novel (or two).
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|  01-07-2010, 12:45 AM | #27 | |
| King of the Bongo Drums            Posts: 1,632 Karma: 5927225 Join Date: Feb 2009 Device: Excelsior! (Strange...) | Quote: 
 In other words, the printed annotation is not a "yes/no" situation. There's a kind of "maybe" incorporated into it that the hyperlink lacks. | |
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|  01-09-2010, 01:49 PM | #28 | 
| Kindle 2 User      Posts: 98 Karma: 496 Join Date: Mar 2009 Location: S.E. Kansas Device: Kindle 2 | 
			
			I too would find that very useful.  One of my favorite hardbacks is "The Annotated Hobbit" annotated by Douglas A. Anderson.  It is a great read although sometimes I do get lost in the side panels containing the various annotations, I find it enjoyable and informative.  I would view books with hyperlinks to be much in the same vein.  In fact I would find it less disctracting if it were done correctly.  I tasteful link that would give a preview of the material if you select it would be great.  A bothersome link animation and such is very distracting.  It all boils down to the implementation, and intentions of the author / publisher.
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