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| View Poll Results: Do you still purchase physical books? | |||
| Yes, more than eBooks. |      | 18 | 9.68% | 
| Yes, the same amount as eBooks. |      | 4 | 2.15% | 
| Yes, but less than eBooks. |      | 47 | 25.27% | 
| Yes, but only when the book is unavailable in digital format. |      | 30 | 16.13% | 
| No, but I still read physical books I already have. |      | 43 | 23.12% | 
| No, and I don't own any physical books. |      | 19 | 10.22% | 
| Other/Option not mentioned here. |      | 33 | 17.74% | 
| Multiple Choice Poll. Voters: 186. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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|  | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | 
|  01-24-2022, 01:44 AM | #31 | 
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 24,905 Karma: 47303824 Join Date: Jul 2011 Location: Sydney, Australia Device: Kobo:Touch,Glo, AuraH2O, GloHD,AuraONE, ClaraHD, Libra H2O; tolinoepos | 
			
			Other for me as well. The only paper books I have bought in the last 10 years have been for other people.
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|  01-24-2022, 01:44 AM | #32 | 
| cacoethes scribendi            Posts: 5,818 Karma: 137770742 Join Date: Nov 2010 Location: Australia Device: Kobo Aura One & H2Ov2, Sony PRS-650 | |
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|  01-24-2022, 06:11 AM | #33 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,432 Karma: 10519918 Join Date: Dec 2009 Device: Ipad Pro/Kindle Oasis 3/iPhone 13 Pro Max | 
			
			I voted no, which is mostly true.  I did buy one hardback a bit ago. I have a friend who has had books published with Baen.    I bought that book and had it signed.  That's been it for over 10 years.  Before the advent of ebooks, I was traveling a lot for work, at times almost weekly. I'd buy books predominately in the airport. You could buy a book in the airport and turn it in for credit, then buy another used book.  So they never built up in the house.  My dad was even thriftier, he'd scour the attic sales in his town in FL and buy books for about a quarter. Read them, then put them in the library in his retirement community. | 
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|  01-24-2022, 08:48 AM | #34 | 
| Zealot            Posts: 111 Karma: 3098438 Join Date: Feb 2021 Location: Canada Device: Kobo Sage | 
			
			I voted #4. I bought a book on British politics that was not available as an ebook in my country a couple of years ago. I was ticked when a year later it became available as an ebook here. (Too late. I already bought and read it!) Recently I've bought a few very old books (40+ year old books) not available in ebook format, and one new book not available in ebook format anywhere. I wish I was good at digitizing stuff, but those old books tend to be 400+ page hardcovers so even if I knew what I was doing it seems like too much work. | 
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|  01-24-2022, 08:49 AM | #35 | 
| Zealot            Posts: 117 Karma: 5915366 Join Date: Jun 2021 Location: USA! USA! 🇺🇸 Device: Kobo Libra H2O, Kobo Clara, Kindle Paperwhite 3, Smartphone | 
			
			I only buy paper books if they are truly unavailable in e-book format, OR the book is exorbitantly expensive as an ebook (and the book is rather short). I have fund I really have little patience for paper books. Yes, they're nice and classic, but I was never a big reader before buying my Kobo because they're terribly inconvenient to carry around. I also have the terrible habit of checking how many pages are left until the next chapter  but my Kobo just tells me at the top of the screen. If I do buy a paper book, it's gonna be secondhand and/or a book I need for reference. Also, non-fiction only. The paper books I own are mostly Japanese reference material, some spiritual reading/bibles, a good amount of photography books (photography ebooks never look as good). And that's about it. Everything else is on the e-reader. | 
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|  01-24-2022, 11:00 AM | #36 | 
| Guru            Posts: 628 Karma: 12345678 Join Date: Jan 2015 Location: Canada Device: none | 
			
			I prefer paper when buying art books or other larger image heavy  'coffee table' style books.   Otherwise I'll always choose the ebook if I have a choice. | 
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|  01-24-2022, 04:25 PM | #37 | 
| Evangelist            Posts: 454 Karma: 3886916 Join Date: May 2013 Location: Ontario, Canada Device: Kindle KB, Oasis, Pop_Os!, Kobo Forma | 
			
			I started with ebooks in about 2008 to make travel easier. Then in 2013 a small basement flood took out most of my paper library. And since then my vision has been going downhill to the point where any paper has to be read with a magnifier. A nice progression to today: reading only ebooks, but have some dormant leftovers.
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|  01-24-2022, 04:31 PM | #38 | 
| Custom User Title            Posts: 11,347 Karma: 79528341 Join Date: Oct 2018 Location: Canada Device: Kobo Libra H2O, formerly Aura HD | |
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|  01-24-2022, 05:27 PM | #39 | 
| Award-Winning Participant            Posts: 7,402 Karma: 69116640 Join Date: Feb 2010 Location: NJ, USA Device: Kindle | 
			
			I chose other.   I'll still buy paper books for art-based books, special editions, and other special purposes that the form is better suited to, and I still have several full bookshelves, but for general reading, it's almost all ebooks.  But even that number is fairly low now, since I consume mostly audiobooks.    My 15 year old daughter, however, reads a lot and greatly prefers paper books, despite being otherwise device-addicted and having access to my Kindle. She spends more time in Barnes and Noble and in the library than anyone else I know, and will usually obtain a paper edition even if we already have the ebook in our collection. | 
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|  01-24-2022, 05:33 PM | #40 | 
| Professor of Law            Posts: 3,755 Karma: 68428716 Join Date: Sep 2010 Location: Chapel Hill, NC Device: Kobo Elipsa, Kobo Libra H20, Kobo Aura One, KoboMini | 
			
			I am 100% ebook and my wife is 100% pbook.  We have an almost even split in the house - we have around 950 physical books and I have just over 1000 books in Calibre.  I selected yes since both still come into the home at a regular clip.
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|  01-24-2022, 07:45 PM | #41 | 
| Guru            Posts: 767 Karma: 4837659 Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: San Angelo  Texas Device: Samsung Galaxy tab | 
			
			Yes, I buy physical books, but not fiction, and fewer than the ebooks I read. I have several health books that I read, reread and loan out. I mostly buy health books in physical form.
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|  01-25-2022, 09:13 AM | #42 | |
| Fanatic            Posts: 548 Karma: 13511506 Join Date: Apr 2013 Location: Cleveland, OH Device: Voyage, Oasis, Kobo Glo HD,iPad Pro, Sony 350 and T2 | Quote: 
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|  01-25-2022, 09:22 AM | #43 | 
| Fanatic            Posts: 548 Karma: 13511506 Join Date: Apr 2013 Location: Cleveland, OH Device: Voyage, Oasis, Kobo Glo HD,iPad Pro, Sony 350 and T2 | 
			
			I selected Yes, but less than ebooks.   I mostly buy ebooks, but sometimes I will buy the physical book when a book has a lot of sidebars or the layout of the pages are not linear.   In this case, an ebook does not handle it well at all.  A PDF would, but I've found that eink is pretty terrible with PDFs.
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|  01-25-2022, 09:52 AM | #44 | ||
| o saeclum infacetum            Posts: 21,514 Karma: 236076651 Join Date: Oct 2010 Location: New England Device: Mini, H2O, Glo HD, Aura One, PW4, PW5 | Quote: 
 As for the first, I’m pretty sure that my own public library hasn’t started accepting donations again yet. As for the second, there are too many instances of people passing along the valueless to a charity so the charity has the problem of disposing it. In this particular case, it’s important to remove the “sacred” aspect to the notion of these books and view them for what they are, a commodity. Then evaluate them closely for ones with intrinsic value, i.e., it would be worth it to another to buy/sell/keep it. And then the rest, which realistically will be most of them as used books have very little value in general, really are trash and should be viewed as such and recycled as possible (covers on hardcovers are not recyclable) and the remainder dumped. In any case, it’s a big job. Books are heavy and bulky - another reason it’s wrong to shift your own deaccession issues onto another entity. | ||
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|  01-25-2022, 10:05 AM | #45 | |
| Professor of Law            Posts: 3,755 Karma: 68428716 Join Date: Sep 2010 Location: Chapel Hill, NC Device: Kobo Elipsa, Kobo Libra H20, Kobo Aura One, KoboMini | Quote: 
 May I present another option that is not a charity shop? Donate books to prisoners. https://prisonbookprogram.org/prisonbooknetwork/ Prison libraries vary wildly from facility to facility and what each state will allow prisoners to read also varies, but you won't find a more marginalized group with less access to reading material in the US. | |
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