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Switch to Ebooks

edited October 2007 in General
What do you guys think of ebooks? I always thought they'd be just as popular as MP3s, but for some reason the transition hasn't really happened how I envisioned it. I think that ebook readers like an ipod of some sort would be pretty handy and would save a lot of paper. Not to mention that books (including textbooks) would be a lot cheaper to buy since it would cost next to nothing for publishing. Is there something I'm missing, why isn't the ebook format more popular?

Comments

  • edited October 2007
    The obvious comparison is to the success of the IPOD, but there are crucial differences.
    1. People listen to the IPOD while doing other things, while an E-book reader will require all of a person's attention.
    2. People like to switch from song to song to song, mixing and matching artists, and so conceivably like to have a huge music library to choose from, but when reading, people don't want or need 75 books to choose from - they probably just want to read one, which they can comfortable carry.
    3. The IPOD is so much lighter than any E-book reader out there - even the Sony one, which I tried out at the UCLA book fair six months ago - which makes for much easier carrying.
    4. While I prefer not to have a huge stack of CDs occupying floor and/or wall space in my apartment, I actually enjoy having the physical presence of books - I think the boxy symmetry of a bookcase decorates beautifully, and it's ever so nice to be able to scan a row of books.
  • edited October 2007
    I think the utility of an e-book reader depends on how you want to use it. If you are a grad student gathering different insights on a physical/mathematical concept you are almost bound to scan between different books to see what each author has to say. It is not possible to learn anything in science from a single book as no book will be nearly good and comprehensive enough to endow you with a multitude of insights on any subject.

    I mean just as a humble instance from my personal experience, whenever I go to a cafe to study on something this proves to be a serious problem for me unless I go there to read Joyce.
  • edited October 2007
    Here's a NY Times Article on ebooks if anyone's interested...very curious about development in this area of technology

    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/06/technology/06amazon.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
  • edited October 2007
    I'd rather have Ebooks than textbooks. However, nothing beats a paperback for fiction. They're just easier on the eyes.

    Those ebook readers would be too much of a pain in the ass to carry around just to read books; especially when I already carry my laptop everywhere.
  • edited October 2007
    Some textbooks come with CDs that have password-protected PDFs of the book. That's actually not a bad idea - you can read the thing but not print it out and resell it.

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