Eva
Member
*raises hand* Card-carrying member already....and possibly very exotic cults dedicated to the consumption of processed wood sprayed with ink...
We LOVE books and hope you'll join us in sharing your favorites and experiences along with your love of reading with our community. Registering for our site is free and easy, just CLICK HERE!
Already a member and forgot your password? Click here.
*raises hand* Card-carrying member already....and possibly very exotic cults dedicated to the consumption of processed wood sprayed with ink...
I remember a period when the in-thing was microfiche. We were all going to have microfiche readers and the book was going to become redundant. As one passionate devotee suggested, we could read in bed by projecting the pages onto the ceiling.
:whistling:
There's something really special about being able to hold your book in your hands. -And, I don't get the same feeling from some random website that I do from walking into a big book store or library.
Well I'm all for increased choices.
As long as people still want real, paper books, then how can the ebook totally replace them? Surely CDs replaced LPs because they were better, and the demand for LPs diminished. The same with VHS. VHS sales dwindled before films became released on DVD only. And the DVD was out for ten years before the VHS became obsolete. This Blu-Ray thing has already been out for a couple of years.
If the new Kimble/whatever is good, better than real, paper books, then it will take off, and ultimately, paper book sales will decrease.
I can't see it, though. Technology is incredibly slow, in real terms. The Internet was invented in something like 1989. Schools installed it 10 years after that. Even now, many people don't use the internet regularly, and have no inclination to.
Young people don't read (as much). If electronic forms of books will encourage the young ones to read, then who are we to say that's a bad thing. The typical reader, though, isn't ready/doesn't want electronic reading devices, so the paper books have a while yet, I reckon.
Technology is not slow. Technology enjoys an exponential growth rate. Compare how long it took to go from radio using tubes, to radio using transistiors, to radios using microchips. The more technology is developed, the faster things change. How about television sets? The technology in my fathers first color television set was good for about ten years. The technology in my HDTV was obsolete less then one year after I purchased it.
I think the e-books are the future if only to rescue trees from printers ink.
Why would they have to be replaced often? I would think the life of one of those things would exceed ten years. I have an electronic dictionary that I picked up in Orlando in the mid 90s, and it still works just fine.
Sure. You can keep a computer, a cell phone, or an MP3 player alive for ten years or more too (well, not all of them; some aren't meant to last that long). Very few people do, though, since it's much easier (and sexier) to update to a new model every two or three years. Like you said, technology enjoys an exponential growth rate and most people want if not the latest model, then at least one that's reasonably up to speed. Surely Amazon haven't planned on selling the exact same Kindle for the next 10 years?
And of course, your ability to store or transfer old e-books you bought ten years ago to your new Kindle Excelsior 7.0 depends both on the DRM and on whether your new reader can even read the old format. Ever try opening up an old MS Works document in the latest version of MS Word, or playing your old DOS games on a Vista machine? Backwards compatibility - especially if the market is flooded with different formats - is a pain in the ass, and why bother when you can just sell people the same books over again?
Surely CDs replaced LPs because they were better, and the demand for LPs diminished.
Actually, LPs are making a serious come back. Music collectors still like to buy LPs and they are readily available if you know where to look. Putting a New Spin on Vinyl Records : NPR Most people are surprised when I tell them that I buy new vinyl at the store because they are sure it is obsolete, but that is simply not true! In the same way that I love to hear that little bit of crackle that you just don't get from a CD, I love to turn a page in a book and no one can make me trade in my books for some the simplicity of a device. If I'm carrying a large book like The Infinite Jest around in my bag, I want people to know! :lol: