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#76 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 251649
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Tempe, AZ, USA, Earth
Device: JetBook Lite (away from home) + 1 spare, 32" TV (at home)
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I agree multiuse devices make more sense, most of the time. A phone wouldn't be suitable since the vast majority of my e-books are going to be scanned pdfs without being OCRed (too time consuming) and will need to be viewd at least the full width of the scanned page. I bought my first netbook with the idea of using it as a reader but found battery life was too limiting and even waking up from hibernation just took too long. It's also heavier than a reader. I love netbooks because they are really handy when traveling and make good backup computers for accessing the internet if my main computer goes down but they make lousy e-book readers. I've been waiting for the readers to improve and come down in price. I recently ordered a 6" Astak that NewEgg knocked $150 off the normal price so I'll see how that works out (if not, I'll send it back and keep waiting). For now (note I said "for now"), I'm finding buying paper books and scanning them is more economical and since I buy used whenever I can, I'm not really impacting the environment since the books are already in existance and headed for the landfills eventually anyway. Eventually, buying e-books directly will be more economical (I'll buy them now if I can get them DRM free; I refuse to subsidize the bastards who sell books with it nor let them force me to be a criminal by buying them and stripping the DRM). |
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#77 | |
Is that a sandwich?
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Karma: 101696762
Join Date: Jun 2010
Device: Nook Glowlight Plus
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#78 | |||
temp. out of service
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Karma: 24285242
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Duisburg (DE)
Device: PB 623
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the display light + batt consumption ... Quote:
Last edited by Freeshadow; 06-16-2010 at 03:31 PM. Reason: typo corr |
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#79 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 251649
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Tempe, AZ, USA, Earth
Device: JetBook Lite (away from home) + 1 spare, 32" TV (at home)
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#80 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 5171130
Join Date: Jan 2006
Device: none
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#81 | |
Astak Director, Bus. Devl
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Karma: 2500000
Join Date: Apr 2008
Device: Astak Pocket PRO
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Some very good thought here.
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You seem to be well tuned in with the situation. I work for a company that makes eBook Readers and has a new eBook Store(www.EZread.com). Books do break actually. I have busted a few bindings. You are very right that devices need to be cheap, light, reliable, easy to carry, and no worry about batteries. I cannot advertise on here for my device and will not. But I can say that certain 5 inch devices weigh 5.8 ounces, fit in a clutch purse or suit jacket pocket, have user-replaceable rechargeable batteries where popping in a spare takes maybe 30 seconds, come with the protective case included, and are selling for $199 now and dropping in price. That would be with 20 formats, 36 languages, text-to-speech, SD card slot to 8,000 eBooks and your MP3, and choice of colors. My point is not to talk about a device but to say that some device manufacturers have heard you and are indeed trying to put out exactly the device specs you name. Some will argue they want the price even lower and we are aiming there... but reading on a good 5 inch is excellent with 9 font sizes and 20 choices of font style. You are right that all statsitics point to people over 45 being the early-adapters to eBook Readers. The young seem to not have much time for reading and never found the joy and adventure of a good book. |
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#82 |
Scott Nicholson, author
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Karma: 2029337
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Boone NC
Device: Kindle
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My daughter w(10, advanced reader) walked into Borders and the FIRST thing she noticed was the Sony reader display--it was the coolest thing in the whole store. She said she'd trade every one of her books to own one, and said, "If I had that, I wouldn't have to pay $4 for a hardcover when the paperback wasn't available" and "I could carry 3,000 books."
BOOM. She is already smarter than publishers. She also said "All bookstores smell the same." Scott |
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#83 | |
Wizard
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Karma: 251649
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Tempe, AZ, USA, Earth
Device: JetBook Lite (away from home) + 1 spare, 32" TV (at home)
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I've broken a few bindings, too (mostly older hard backs). At least they were still readable (even though it was a pain in the neck). Paper backs seem to be way more robust (unless left in the sun in a locked vehicle in my neck of the woods in summer). I have never doubted that e-Book manufacturers are developing their product and trying to lower prices since that has been happening. I've just been waiting for the quality to increase and the price to lower to a point I find acceptable. It just may be that is now. I'll know when I get my reader in the next few days. As far as saying it was the 45+ demographic that are the early adopters of e-books goes, I never actually said that although I have seen statistics supporting that (I'm an old fart at 61). The 45+ crowd may be the early adopters (probably because they have more money) but it's the younger generations who will make e-books and readers a success, even if they don't read as much as us old folks do (btw, both of my kids are in their midthirties and read voraciously). Traditionally, they adopt new technology more quickly than us old fogeys because they grew up with it and haven't developed the hard to break habits and attachments to older technology us older folks have. In my case, I much prefer paper books to e-book technology but I'm adopting it from necessity. I have roughly 1100 paper books that I refuse to give up but I'm moving into travel trailer in a year or two and there is no way I can cram them all in there unless I digitize them. I've already done that with my CDs and will with my old photos (I use digital cameras now, thank God) and DVDs. Pity I can't digitize my tools (Daddy was a machinist and I inherited his love of tools). |
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#84 |
Zealot
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Karma: 36
Join Date: Nov 2009
Device: Kindle 2i
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ebooks very well may become more popular, but many like myself still prefer the real thing. I have an ereader mainly to read web material and books I can get for free, as well as those I can rent for free from my local library via overdrive.
I will never buy an ebook, it is just a flat out waste of money when you can have a uninhibited paper version in your home. But that is just my option. I have had my kindle for nearly 6 months and still am yet to buy an ebook, and I don't plan on it anytime soon. I have downloaded a few of the available classics, but surly did not pay for them. I truly prefer paper based books, especially those made of high quality paper. I mainly use my kindle for material which is not worth printing, but is worth knowing and not worth reading on the computer. As an example would be a wikipedia page or a RFC. News, blogs and the like are also good for ereaders, but again I would never pay amazon for them. But is it better than a printed news paper, if there is no missing content which seems common these days. I also feel I learn a lot better from paper books than I do ebooks. There is just something missing from the ereader. As an example, my textbooks are filled with small notes, such is just to hard on an ereader. Today I was working on a circuit, I was able to go back to my engineering circuits text from school, and knew exactly where to look in the book for the formula I needed. My knowledge is tied to those books, and I need them here in print format. I also like to own what I buy, and don't want to rent them. I will never buy a book or any form of media which includes any form of DRM. I also don't want companies to have the ability to change what I buy, or decide they should take it away. If I buy it I want it in my home, for me to have and hold. I am the exact same with music, movies and tv shows. I would never consider buying a album from iTunes when I can just buy the real thing at the store, or from amazon with free shipping. I get a higher quality product and its mine. Thats how I feel I guess. Id consider buying an ebook, if I had the option to get the paper copy for free along with it. But paying $9.99 for an ebook when I can get the paper copy for the same price is insane. A proper price for an ebook, to me at least would be around $2 USD. If they cant go that low, they include the ebooks with the purchase of a paper copy and allow those who don't want the paper copy to simply opt out. |
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