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|  01-22-2011, 03:17 PM | #16 | 
| Grand Master of Flowers            Posts: 2,201 Karma: 8389072 Join Date: Oct 2010 Location: Naptown Device: Kindle PW, Kindle 3 (aka Keyboard), iPhone, iPad 3 (not for reading) | 
			
			This is correct, and an important point.  More specifically, e-ink readers provide the most complete experience for the traditional mass-market paperback novel.  The farther you move away from this model, the more you will give up with current e-ink readers.  Pictures and other graphics are problematic...and when they can be done, are inferior.  Navigating other than linearly is inconvenient.  And the page sizes are small - one (dual column) page of my old law school textbooks was the size of four paperback pages - and because it displayed two pages (the way that books do), I basically saw 8 eink screens at one time.  Which made flipping through the book even easier. The Honda Accord is a great car for most uses. But it's not ideal if you want to do a lot of offroading. The same is true of an e-ink reader. They are horrible for offroading!  Well, I mean, they are really good at some things, and not so good at others. And it's good to recognize this in advance. | 
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|  01-22-2011, 03:50 PM | #17 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,449 Karma: 58383 Join Date: Jul 2009 Device: Kindle, iPad | 
			
			I read mostly nonfiction and there are times when I miss being able to flip through print books. For instance, I sometimes want to compare parts of two history or business books when I read something that jogs my memory. Even with two devices side by side, it's not as quick or easy as flipping through two print books. Flipping and using multiple books at the same time also came in handy during school, as I remember. That said, there's nothing to stop me from buying print books, as well as e-books. It doesn't make sense to dismiss the advantages of technology when I don't have to pick between digital and print; I can use both to my advantage. As for people who don't like digital reading: shrug. I don't care how anyone else prefers to read. If they read at all, I think that's great. I'm not interested in converting anyone to e-books. It's not as if their preferences reflect on mine, or vice versa. | 
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|  01-22-2011, 03:58 PM | #18 | |
| Fanatic            Posts: 553 Karma: 1234566 Join Date: Jul 2010 Location: Vancouver, WA Device: Sony PRS-T1, & Kobo Mini | Quote: 
 With internal links, search capabilities, a table of contents, the ability to go to any page, and user-created bookmarks/notations I don't see ebooks having any disadvantage compared to pbooks. | |
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|  01-22-2011, 04:13 PM | #19 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 2,899 Karma: 6995721 Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: Idaho, on the side of a mountain Device: Kindle Oasis, Fire 3d Gen and 5th Gen and Samsung Tab S | 
			
			The only time I leaf through a book (back and forth and back and forth) is research.  For fiction books, the ereader bookmarks the page for me, so I have no reason to leaf through (to find my place).  I kinda miss the ability to look before buying, but (1) no one is preventing me from going in to a bookstore to do just that and (2) I find samples, when I can get them (from Amazon) are a better indicator, and won't spoil the book for me.
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|  01-22-2011, 04:27 PM | #20 | |
| Transplanted NYer            Posts: 455 Karma: 520286 Join Date: May 2009 Location: Eastern IN Device: Kindle Fire HD 8.9", Kindle Fire HD 7", Kindle Touch | Quote: 
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|  01-22-2011, 05:27 PM | #21 | 
| Zealot           Posts: 134 Karma: 1337 Join Date: Dec 2010 Device: Sony PRS 350 | 
			
			As someone who only reads fantasy novels, I absolutely love my ereader. I can't comment on technical books and what not but I think reading my fantasy books on the ereader is better than a physical book. I can search for specific passages far more easily than if I was looking through the actual book. I can quickly bookmark multiple important pages in the novel and go back to them at any time.
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|  01-22-2011, 05:37 PM | #22 | |||
| Resident Curmudgeon            Posts: 80,740 Karma: 150249619 Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3 | Quote: 
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|  01-22-2011, 05:41 PM | #23 | |
| Resident Curmudgeon            Posts: 80,740 Karma: 150249619 Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3 | Quote: 
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|  01-22-2011, 06:06 PM | #24 | 
| Retired            Posts: 2,552 Karma: 37638420 Join Date: Nov 2010 Location: Vancouver Island Canada Device: Kobo Touch, Optimus One (2.3), Nexus 7 (4.2) | 
			
			Have you heard of table of contents?
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|  01-22-2011, 08:31 PM | #25 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,262 Karma: 2979086 Join Date: Nov 2010 Device: Kindle 4, iPad Mini/Retina | 
			
			It's been four years. Start complaining in another hundred or so. Eventually they'll have bound "books" that are a stack of hundreds of flexible paper-thin screens that display an entire book of your choosing. The entire surface of the cover will be a display as well. Maybe. Also flying cars and sexbots. In the meantime they have not replaced paper books for me. It's a nice addition. Hurry up sexbots. | 
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|  01-23-2011, 04:44 AM | #26 | ||
| Zealot            Posts: 119 Karma: 87860 Join Date: May 2007 Location: Strasbourg France Device: Onyx Max 3 & Onyx Lumi 2 | Quote: 
 If all the books/papers in the scientific fields have hypertext references, hypertext table of content, maybe my appreciation would change a little. Quote: 
 But what about flexible paper-thin? | ||
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|  01-23-2011, 06:16 AM | #27 | 
| Member            Posts: 14 Karma: 18024 Join Date: Jan 2011 Location: Kuala Lumpur Device: prs950, prs-t1 | 
			
			This thread may just be the start of new possibilities! I read tech books too, and ereader is not adequate for this use, I agree. Maybe once the battles for 'bigger screen', 'faster processor', etc have been won, the technical market segment may get more attention.  May be somebody could start looking at how to e- flip pages :-). May be somebody could split the screen in 2, and 1 part of the screen is the current page, and the other half is thumbnails of previous/next pages. Or, 'page flow', like iTunes album flow. There is definitely a market for ereader with e-flip, if designed right. :-) | 
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|  01-23-2011, 06:29 AM | #29 | |
| Book addict            Posts: 441 Karma: 2650464 Join Date: Jun 2010 Location: Antarctica/Australia/Ohio Device: Sony PRS-300/T1/Asus TF101 | Quote: 
 I think I'd still prefer to read them on my computer rather than my sony, but TBH I bought the sony specifically for leisure reading and it's not fancy. I have no idea whether the sony will handle hyperlinks - I've never tried, and since it's a 5" screen I don't plan to read too many scientific papers on it. | |
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|  01-23-2011, 06:32 AM | #30 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,065 Karma: 858115 Join Date: Jan 2011 Device: Kobo Clara, Kindle Paperwhite 10 | 
			
			There are thin, flexible keyboards now. I think thin flexible displays will be here in less than 5 years, and will get increasingly thinner and more flexible and more capable eventually including the processors and data storage sandwiched in nanomolecules within the thin, flexible material so that there will be no separate computers, displays, keyboards, mice, touchpads, etc. Not to mention that they'll be cheap and disposable eventually.
		 Last edited by unboggling; 01-23-2011 at 06:36 AM. | 
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