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#121 | |
Nameless Being
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#122 |
Wizard
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Device: Paperwhite 4
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I've been reading books for about 74 years now. I've also listened to a LOT of audiobooks as well as reading ebooks in the past 40 or 50 years. I began listening to audio literature on Caedmon records. I began reading ebooks before they were called ebooks.
A little while ago I browsed through a list of the 100 books you should read in your lifetime and I think I read maybe 1/3 of those books. Some I listened to. Most I read. In a number of cases I can't recall which I did. I both read and listened to several of them. If it matters how I experienced them I can't tell it. With lots of reading and listening behind me I can't really convince myself that reading and listening are the same thing. They are different although I don't think I can state what those differences are. It probably varies with each book and each narrator. But I can see no reason to think one is superior to the other. Listening is probably, at times at least, a bit more focused. The narrator is driving and setting the pace. He's also read the book already and his knowledge of what's to come affects his phrasing and emphasis and probably gives me a little extra insight. Reading myself let's me stop more easily to think about what's being said. So both have their advantages. They're simply not the same experience. My preference is for reading visually. I still do both but I read a LOT more than I listen. That's a personal preference and if I could only listen I'd be happy enough with that. The argument about which is better can never be answered. The only answer ever is a personal one. Barry |
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#123 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Oct 2010
Device: Kindle Fire, Kindle Paperwhite, AGPTek Bluetooth Clip
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#124 |
Bibliophagist
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Location: Vancouver
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I can't help but wonder what you were reading ebooks on in the 1968-1978 timeframe?
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#125 |
Readaholic
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I love reading books and listening to audiobooks. To me they do the same thing using two different senses. I do not see any difference in the two when it comes to enjoying a good story.
Apache |
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#126 | |
Karma Kameleon
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Device: iPad Mini, iPhone X, Kindle Fire Tab HD 8, Walmart Onn
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I liken these “adults” crowing about reading as the same as adults bragging about wearing lace up shoes over loafers because it involves tying your shoes verses slipping them on. The time to be proud of tying one's shoes ends in kindergarten. Puffing oneself up due to reading should end about the fourth grade. Perhaps WHAT you read might matter....but not THAT you read |
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#127 |
Nameless Being
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#128 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Australia
Device: Kobo Libra 2, iPadMini4, iPad4, MBP; support other Kobo/Kindles
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#129 | |
Wizard
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Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Arkansas
Device: Paperwhite 4
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That said, if I had known about them I could have read them earlier. Michael Hart is thought to have originated ebooks in 1971 and founded Gutenberg in that same year. I wasn't aware of this till after I bought my HP95lx but if I had been I'd probably have been reading earlier. Ebooks didn't become common until the Palm Pilot, sometime in 1992 or later. I got my first Palm about 1993 and by then they were all over the place on Palm sites. It was still a few years later before you could actually buy ebooks. I'm not allowed to talk about this much in here but commercial ebooks came into being when there were already a lot of people reading ebooks, mostly on Palms. I think a small point of protest is needed here. I'm all for keeping this site honest but being unable to talk about the real history of ebooks doesn't really seem like a good way of doing it. Barry |
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#130 | |||
Bibliophagist
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Location: Vancouver
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![]() The only commercial ebook I remember purchasing in the early 1990's was from one author who made some of his books available in electronic format as plain text files with a shareware pricing scheme. Most of the commercial ebooks available in the early and middle of that decade were simply of no interest to me. From what I remember, the commercial ebook market really started--for me--in 1999 and I started buying books in electronic form. My wife remembers Romance.net(?) a few years earlier in 1996 though she made relatively few purchases until she borrowed an ereader from me. Most of my early purchases were from Baen's Webscription service since they were publishing books I wanted to read. Oddly, I still find Baen as among my favourite ebooks sources. What can I say? Jim Baen's stance on DRM, the Free Library, the books on CD bound into their hardcovers. The Free Library alone resulted in my purchasing quite a few other books either to finish a series I started there or from finding an author whose work I liked. I would agree that discussing the real history of ebooks should be permitted. As one of those who was there, it took a lot more work and time to convert an DTB to electronic format that it took me to earn the money to purchase an ebook--if it had been available. |
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#131 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Jan 2010
Device: Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HD
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Talking about how you scanned and converted your own physical copies of books to ebooks for your own personal use is perfectly acceptable. Always has been. It's talking about how you (rhet.) shared them online with friends that's taboo.
Personal scanning and converting may have been the "real history" of ebooks, but sharing copyrighted books online was the real history of ebook piracy. That it may have felt like a labor of love to you (rhet.) is immaterial to that fact. The golden - "Before We Were Called Pirates" - age of online ebook-sharing that some like to harken back to with a sense of nostalgia is a myth. You (rhet.) were always pirates if you made them available on (or downloaded them from) whatever they called your corner of the internet back in your glory years. Last edited by DiapDealer; 12-10-2018 at 06:39 AM. |
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#132 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Location: Atlanta, GA
Device: iPad Pro, iPad mini, Kobo Aura, Amazon paperwhite, Sony PRS-T2
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At the time, one dividing line was, did you make money off any ebook you scanned. If you did, and you were not the copyright holder, you were a pirate. Another dividing line was did you own a physical copy of the book. Some people held that if you owned a physical copy of the book, then you didn't necessarily have to scan it yourself. You might scan one book and someone else scan another book and you traded. As long as you were not paying, no one was making money and you owned physical copies of books that you downloaded and were not commercially available as ebooks, then you were not considered a pirate. I think those dividing lines were at least defensible for the time period. Of course, things are very different now. It's a rare book that has come out in the last 10 years that isn't available as an ebook commercially. One can argue about orphaned works. Personally, I would argue that the correct solution for orphaned works is to put them in a separate category and come up with a fair way to make orphaned works available and still protect the rights of the copyright holder if one turns up. But do that via legislation. Others may disagree, but that's fine. It's a difficult enough situation where people can legitimately disagree on how to handle it. |
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#133 | |
o saeclum infacetum
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Location: New England
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So what was interesting to me in the article is that it cites interpretation as a positive, as in the quote from Romeo and Juliet. Fair enough in that instance and I even agree that there are books where I prefer audio because the narration/interpretation is so entertaining. It doesn't bother me that I'm listening to an interpretation; I don't find that objectively a bad thing. But I must note that I don't find narrators entirely reliable, either. I'd never, ever trust a narrator's pronunciation, for example; I've heard far too many howlers. For me, pronunciation issues are the single major drawback to audiobooks. One will take me right out of the story for a bit; many will ruin a book. QC needs to be much better in that respect. |
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#134 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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That no commercial etext was available, or the fact that someone already purchased a hard-copy was just as irrelevant then as it is now; RE uploading/downloading copyrighted material. Last edited by DiapDealer; 12-10-2018 at 08:16 AM. |
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#135 | |
Wizard
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[edit] I just realized this sounds skeptical. It's not. I was surprised by your comments about books on BBS and I was expressing that surprise. I don't doubt you at all. Barry |
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