Reformed Chicks Blabbing

Reformed Chicks Blabbing

“When I look at books, I see an outdated technology, like scrolls before books”

posted by Susan Johnson | 10:16pm Sunday September 6, 2009

When I was still working in the tech industry after my oldest was born, I had a conversation with my boss who thought our kids would be the first generation who would break their dependence on books and would read everything on their computers. They would be the first truly digital generation. I doubted it at the time since I knew we couldn’t shake our dependence on the feel of books. We like how books feel in our hands. We like the smell, the cover art. It’s part of the whole reading experience and one we can’t shake. I also discounted it because computers weren’t as portable then (the bathroom reading experience is an important factor in all this :-) .
And even though we can now take our computers (in the form of smart phones, Palms, and iPhones/iTouch) into the bathroom, we still cling to our books. My daughter has been on a computer since she was a toddler, she’s had a laptop all of her high school years and when each of use got an iTouch
I tried to interest her in the books she could read with the Kindle app but she doesn’t like to read digital novels! She likes the feel of the book in her hands. So much for the digital generation. Maybe she’s a throwback but I suspect that many of us still like to hold our books in our hands, feeling the smoothness of the paper as we turn the pages (it is a sensual experience, one that’s not easily duplicated by e-books, though I do like the feel of the screen as I flick the pages of my Kindle app — see, they had to keep the flicking aspect of books, it’s part of the reading experience, it’s much more natural than scrolling). We still like to walk the aisles of the bookstore looking for new books in our favorite categories or going to the library and pursuing the new fiction and nonfiction section. That’s why I wouldn’t be too interested in this school for my kids:

And to replace those old pulpy devices that have transmitted information since Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press in the 1400s, they have spent $10,000 to buy 18 electronic readers made by Amazon.com and Sony. Administrators plan to distribute the readers, which they’re stocking with digital material, to students looking to spend more time with literature.
Those who don’t have access to the electronic readers will be expected to do their research and peruse many assigned texts on their computers.
“Instead of a traditional library with 20,000 books, we’re building a virtual library where students will have access to millions of books,” said Tracy, whose office shelves remain lined with books. “We see this as a model for the 21st-century school.”

Notice the implied criticism of Tracy’s lack of commitment to his own vision of the digital age, even he can’t give up his books. Trying to sweep away a tradition that we are all still clinging to,even the most forward thinking of us, strikes me as a foolish use of funds. I wouldn’t want them wasting my tuition money when they realize that they really do need those books that they discarded.
I hope this trend doesn’t go too far the way it did with newspapers and magazines. I like to be the one to determine which form my book takes. Whether I choose to read one on my iTouch using the Kindle app or whether I buy a published book. I suspect that with biblical study books, I’m going to want the books published the old fashioned way but with novels, either form works for me. Sometimes I buy a novel in paperback and sometimes I buy it on Amazon for the Kindle app on my iTouch.
I like having more choices. Buying the newest from James Rollins for $9.99 on the Kindle (his publisher did the best job of any of the books I’ve read on Kindle so far, excellent use of the various features of Kindle, they really made it easy to read on the iTouch), as opposed to waiting my turn at the library or waiting for the paperback edition. Or buying the paperback version of The Reason for God (I already have the audio, see what kind of pull the printed word still has) and The Family because there was a buy 1 get 1 for half off sale at Borders. I can buy whatever medium works for me at the time (though, I’m pretty ticked that I’m not going to be able to get the third book in John Twelve Hawks’ Fourth Realm Trilogy the third book in John Twelve Hawks’ Fourth Realm Trilogy for $9.99 on Kindle, it costs $14.27, I’m going to wait a couple weeks to see if it comes down like I did with The Doomsday Key). Especially, when I can get a brand new hardcover, The Lost Symbol, delivered to my iTouch on the day it goes on sale, for the price of a paper. How much more convenient can you get?
BTW, here’s a link to the paper, “Hamlet’s Blackberry: Why Paper Is Eternal,” mentioned in the article.



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Moonshadow

posted September 7, 2009 at 12:07 am


I don’t think we’re making books the way we used to. And I’m not just talking about the insides. ‘Though I’m frustrated at typos and factual errors. At least such things can be corrected in real time with electronic books, so long as there was proper change control (I’ll show my age, “SCCS.” Hey, UNIX turned 40 this past June).
I’ve bought many a book from Amazon’s used books, always with satisfactory experiences.
But we aren’t yet where this guy thinks we are. Or wants us to be. I’m actually more inclined to splurge on a hardback, especially for reference, as available.
(I watched the movie Fahrenheit 451 last weekend … I really liked it. There’s supposed to be a remake in the works.)



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zaine_ridling

posted September 7, 2009 at 3:26 am


Simply put, the Kindle is too restrictive.
If only the Kindle allowed “open” access to any digital book or text. For the Kindle to be useful, both the software and its formats should be open and free. In other words, I should be able to upload any document I want in any “open” format, such as ODF, TXT, or PDF. (Microsoft’s proprietary file formats do not permit such openness.)
Amazon should completely relinquish the ability to make changes to users’ Kindle libraries. Another problem with Kindle is how the technology could provide a tool for censorship, especially as the Kindle enters new markets.
For example, Google has taken criticism in the past for how it has assisted China’s government in censoring the internet.
As long as Amazon uses DRM on the Kindle, any books you buy will evaporate and have to be repurchased. So use the device with great caution.



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John Bankston

posted September 7, 2009 at 1:05 pm


@zaine_ridling:
Your statement “As long as Amazon uses DRM on the Kindle, any books you buy will evaporate and have to be repurchased” is wrong; emphasis on your use of the word “will”.
E-books on the Kindle don’t time out and if you get another Kindle due to theft, damage, etc., you restore your e-books from the backup Amazon keeps. Amazon has the “ability” to remove e-books via DRM but to say they “will” remove them is just wrong. John Bankston



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Robert R.

posted September 7, 2009 at 1:08 pm


A huge downside of Kindle for authors is that Amazon pays a royalty of 10%. Now you don’t make a whole lot more than that through conventional publishing, but if Amazon gets 90%, and your print publisher gets 50% of the 10%, and taxes get 50% of the 50% of the 10%, you’re pretty much left with diddley squat after you write your book. .At some point all the real writers will have found other work and Amazon will be able to sell total junk electronically for 10 bucks a copy



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Chris Warren

posted September 8, 2009 at 8:46 am


Good to read an article that talks about both e-literature and hard copy literature existing in tandem, rather than the now rather overworked arguments talking about the benefits of one over the other and whether e-books will ever replace hard copy.
The fact is there is room in the market for both because they are different products with different benefits appropriate for different occasions and situaions. We have both tea-bags and loose tea leaves in our kitchen cupboard!
Chris Warren
Author and Freelance Writer
Randolph’s Challenge Book One – The Pendulum Swings



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Michele McGinty

posted September 9, 2009 at 12:37 am


“We have both tea-bags and loose tea leaves in our kitchen cupboard!”
So do I! That’s the beauty of America, freedom of choice. And whatever product attracts the cash remains. I figure books will be around for a while.



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Michele McGinty

posted September 9, 2009 at 12:40 am


“At some point all the real writers will have found other work and Amazon will be able to sell total junk electronically for 10 bucks a copy”
Doubt it, go look and see who gets that $10. It’s not junk writers but bestsellers. If they stop offering those authors, I won’t buy the books no matter how much I enjoy the experience. And I bet I’m not the only one.



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John

posted September 9, 2009 at 1:43 pm


The real advantages of a real book still outweight the alleged advantages of an electronic one. Here are just a few:
1) Once you own it, it’s yours to do with as you like.
2) You can loan it to others, pass it around, and then get it back. You can give it away, or sell it if you want.
3) You can turn the pages.
4) You can make notes in it.
5) No one else can change, delete or edit it once you own it.
6) You can sometimes get it signed by the author.
7) You don’t need electricity to read it. 8) You can take it and read it absolutely anywhere.
I’m sure there are more, and I’m sure paper books will be around quite a lot longer for these reasons and more.



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Moonshadow

posted September 9, 2009 at 1:55 pm


#6 is my favorite one, John!



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