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		#46 | 
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			 Resident Curmudgeon 
			
			![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posts: 80,782 
				Karma: 150249619 
				Join Date: Nov 2006 
				Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts 
				
				
				Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3 
				
				
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		#47 | 
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			 Resident Curmudgeon 
			
			![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posts: 80,782 
				Karma: 150249619 
				Join Date: Nov 2006 
				Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts 
				
				
				Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3 
				
				
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			I do find reading with my 505 to be a lot easier then reading from a big hardcover book. The 505 is lighter and a lot easier to hold in one hand. Even though paperbacks (mass market) are easy enough to hold with one hand, I do need the other hand to turn the page.
		 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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		#48 | 
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			 Nameless Being 
			
			
			
		
			
			
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			Hmmm, to be honest I still read some paper but none of them are the paperbacks that used to make up so much of my library. The paper I still have or buy are at least a good full size hardback. 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
	In fact I will buy the hardback AFTER reading the digital version if I really enjoyed it and figure to reread it leisurely later. There is something that still satisfies long held desires by settling into a comfortable chair (especially when the weather turns chilly) with a slow reading book being read just to read. Books like this make it easy to end up with some really nice book shelves. (Looking over I can see one shelf with Tolkien, the Oz series and a good chunk of Twain. All of them in high quality bindings and paper that make them a joy to read.) Sooo, guess that means I don't read digital much? Not true. 98 percent of my reading is still on some sort of screen. Most of my reading before was done in paperbacks which my Sony and Cybook have taken over. Reading a standard PB now is...awkward (some actually border on painful for some of the more badly bound ones). It all boils down to moving from a library consisting of paperbacks with some hardbacks (limited due to small space in the apartment) to a library consisting of digital and HQ hardbacks. By using the reader so much I've actually become a more discerning physical book buyer and reader due to higher standards compared to the previous baseline of PBs.  | 
	
		
		
		
		
			 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
			
		
		
		
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		#49 | 
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			 Connoisseur 
			
			![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posts: 76 
				Karma: 1944308 
				Join Date: Sep 2009 
				Location: Nova Scotia, Canada 
				
				
				Device: Kobo, Mini, Glo, Aura and Aura H20 
				
				
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				Browsing
			 
			
			
			What I like about pBooks is browsing. I've been reading eBooks for 4 or 5 years. But I still spend a good chunk of time in Chapters (Canadian version of Barnes and Nobles) just looking around. I find more new and interesting books like that than I ever will at Fictionwise, Sony store etc... Lets face it ebook stores basically suck.Then there is the discount pBooks books, I'm a big sucker for those. So I still read a fair amount of pBooks at home but none when I'm away, which is half the year. I really don't find a difference. To me it's all about the story, not the packaging. 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
	Regards, Daryl  | 
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		#50 | |
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			 Banned 
			
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				Karma: 15348 
				Join Date: Jun 2007 
				
				
				
				Device: mine 
				
				
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		 Quote: 
	
 Speaking of reading...I think I need a bit of a Hal: Space Jock fix tonight... ![]() These days the only print books I read are photography books and the odd coding reference when I want to mod one of my own apps...  | 
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		#51 | |
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			 Tech Junkie 
			
			![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posts: 1,027 
				Karma: 10080 
				Join Date: Aug 2007 
				Location: Earth 
				
				
				Device: iPad, MotoXStyle, OnePlusOne 
				
				
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		 Quote: 
	
 Its funny, I actually find it the other way around. While In bookstores I might read around more in the same genre, on switching to eBooks I'm finding that I'm reading a lot of books I would never ever have thought off reading if I saw them in the bookstore. Some of the books I've discovered by just random trawls through the bookstore, searching by title or keyword for a certain word and finding a lot of interesting books which iIve never seen before. While eBook selection is a bit limited compared to paper books, especially if you have a good local bookshop with a lot of variety, I've found that I usually have more to read then I really have time for. Coupled with rereading old favorites, I've not run out of reading material in past couple of years. Also, Half of the year I'm in places and countries where English language book selection tends to be mainly limited to the latest bestsellers, if that. As such the variety available as eBooks and the prices are often a godsent, especially when comparing it to some of the prices for books in some parts of the world (50%-100% Markup).  | 
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		#52 | 
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			 Guru 
			
			![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posts: 834 
				Karma: 102419 
				Join Date: Sep 2007 
				Location: Vienna, Austria 
				
				
				Device: iPhone 
				
				
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			I agree with darylbrayman - "browsing" through eBook stores is not the same as going to a good bookshop. I think my main problem with eBook stores is the fact that there is an inordinate number of romance and/or techbooks available, and quite often you see books from young/unknown authors flooding the category sections. 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
	I'd like to be able to click a "only list well-known authors" button or something ... I can't read too often, and I'm not in the mood to "experiment". Also, there is a really neat bookstore right beside where I work that specializes in crime, thriller and horror, and every day I walk past and get to see awesome covers of books I know I want to read. It kind of makes me sad that I can't support this guy because I just can't bring myself to read a pBook. I did buy a couple as presents for friends and family.  | 
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		#53 | |
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			 The me that I am 
			
			![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posts: 413 
				Karma: 1078 
				Join Date: Jan 2009 
				Location: In my house! Duh! 
				
				
				Device: Kindle 1 & DR 1000s 
				
				
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 As for flowers and chocolates, I'd get my wife those things, but she kills every plant we get and constantly complains about her weight (or at least her waistline).  | 
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		#54 | |
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			 Grand Sorcerer 
			
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				Karma: 32763414 
				Join Date: Dec 2008 
				Location: Krewerd 
				
				
				Device: Pocketbook Inkpad 4 Color; Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 
				
				
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 And how do I feel? I always get pain in my hands because I have to keep the book open. Or I'm turning and turning and again turning in bed because I want to read the other page... I find it inconvenient, as I need the bedlight on, instead of using the backlight on my reader. And I can't really curl around my book, as I will block the bedlight. Having said that, I will not get rid of my pbook collection, far from it. But for general reading I'll use my reader.  | 
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		#55 | 
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			 Enthusiast 
			
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				Karma: 222 
				Join Date: May 2009 
				Location: Los Angeles 
				
				
				Device: Kindle2, Kindle DX, prs 505 
				
				
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			I use the public library more.  Since I prefer the reading experience on the ebook reader, I don't want to keep buying paper books.  Unfortunately there are still many books I wish to read that are available only on paper.  This has led to my rediscovery of the public library (which is reinforced by my office being directly across the street from the Los Angeles Main Library which is significantly better than my local branch).  Instead of buying books unavailable electronically, I now borrow them from the library.   
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
	Occassionally I'll buy a used copy of a book and turn it into an ebook for my own use. I prefer the ability to carry multiple books, the ability to adjust fonts, the ability to leave the reader flat on a table, the ability to search the text, the ability to immediately reference a dictionary, the small size of the device, and the overall reading experience on the ebook reader. I am taking the commuter train to work and back; it is an hour each way. The ebook reader is perfect for the train.  | 
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		#56 | 
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			 Evangelist 
			
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				Karma: 546196 
				Join Date: Mar 2009 
				Location: UK canal boat 
				
				
				Device: sony prs505, prs650, kobo Glo HD liseuses 
				
				
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			I've had my 505 for nearly a year now, and I'm still happy to read pbooks, if there isn't an e version conveniently to hand. My preference for ebooks is demonstrated though by my intention to start converting some of my very old Penguins (2/6d or less!) to epub via scanning and editing. 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
	Love: carrying my entire security blanket, sorry, library around with me; being able to eat my lunch and read without dropping the book in the gravy; the pages don't go yellow and brittle; can bookmark LOTS; can correct the typos if item is not DRMd Don't like: not being able to flick through the pages; the 505 is nbg for illustrations; referring to endnotes is clunky; For me, pbooks will still win out when the content is heavily illustrated (imagine trying to look at an Ansell Adams photo on a 505); otherwise, the liseuse wins hands down for portability and convenience.  | 
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		#57 | 
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			 The Dank Side of the Moon 
			
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				Karma: 119747553 
				Join Date: Sep 2009 
				Location: Denver, CO 
				
				
				Device: Kindle2 & PW, Onyx Boox Go6 
				
				
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		#58 | 
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			 Groupie 
			
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				Karma: 2136526 
				Join Date: Jun 2009 
				Location: Tampa, FL 
				
				
				Device: Kindle PW, Kobo Libra Color 
				
				
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			I just read my first paper back in a while...I was trying to read in bed, on my side, and kept getting really frustrated that I had to reposition the book every time I needed to turn the page, or turn over to be comfortable reading. I missed my Reader.
		 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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		#59 | 
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			 Wizard 
			
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				Karma: 16056 
				Join Date: Jun 2009 
				Location: Asia 
				
				
				Device: Kindle 3 WiFi, Sony PRS-505 
				
				
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			If a book is something I deem important or useful or enjoyable enough to reread or reuse, I get it in paper.  If it's more disposable reading like magazines or newspapers, I stick to paper or computers.  If it's a disposable novel that's very difficult for me to even give away, I'll try to put it on my ebook reader to save space.  If the story turns out to be really good halfway through though, I might try to get a paper copy so I can finish it. 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
	I'm not yet lazy enough or disabled enough to complain about reading on paper.  | 
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		#60 | 
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			 neilmarr 
			
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				Join Date: Apr 2009 
				Location: Monaco-Menton, France 
				
				
				Device: sony 
				
				
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			Ebook reading has transformed my home ... and probably saved my marriage. 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
			Although I don't mind passing books on to other bookworms, I hate the idea of trashing them. But so few folks where I live in France read English, that I -- quite literally -- can't give 'em away (though my French wife can easily offload her French language novels). The result is that I've collected so many books over our eighteen years together that you can hardly move in our wee apartment for bookshelves, bursting at the seams, lining every wall, books in wobbly stacks all over the place, books on pretty well every flat surface, books under the bed, books in wardrobes, books on top of wardrobes; even the cave (the local equivalent of a basement or attic) is jam-packed with teachests full of books. Drives my wife nuts. So -- now doing all my recreational reading on a 505 -- she managed to persuade me for the first time on Friday that 'some' of these books should go and that the weekend should be dedicated to the clearance job. It was a painful decision to make -- like throwing an old but old friend out of the house because he'd outlived any usefulness and was taking up too much space. But I was amazed, as we checked out each book, just how many -- if I every want to read them again -- I can get in ebook form. Box after box of books was earmarked to be disposed of. And today, we have a few hundred more to sift through before we're through. Already, there's a new feeling of space and order at home (the cat is confused). And, you know, I hardly shed a tear. Ebook reading has turned what looked like a cross between a dusty old second hand book shop and a garage sale into a pretty neat place to actually live ... and my thankful and happy wife, Skovia, has just brought me a pot of fresh coffee onto the terrace with a nice Havana Romeo y Julietta cigar for after breakfast. Swearing off treebooks has vastly improved the quality of life in ways I rever dreamed of. Cheers. Neil PS on Monday morning: the clearing of Chez Marr is almost complete. With ruthless dedication, I've consigned about five-hundred books to the dumpster. I doubt they'll ever be replaced by new treebooks -- who needs 'em? N Last edited by neilmarr; 10-12-2009 at 03:40 AM. Reason: to add PS  | 
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