A personal jet-pack for the 21st century
Feb. 12th, 2009 12:13 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Shorter John Siracusa: e-books' coming domination of publishing is inevitable, do you hear me? Inevitable!
Nicked from Charles Stross, who pretty much would have to be more positive about e-books than I am.
Nicked from Charles Stross, who pretty much would have to be more positive about e-books than I am.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-12 05:57 pm (UTC)Heck, if they can make computer screens of e-paper (or whatever they're calling it) that would also be wonderful. Seriously, I hate that reading PDF's or my own drafts is still staring at a light bulb.
no subject
Date: 2009-02-12 06:29 pm (UTC)There are tens of millions of people in the U.S. who regularly use page display software of some sort for personal use. Why lock them out? I could see it for technical reasons, if eInk didn't scale up or something. (Which seems to be the problem for color display.) But it's a failure of ergonomic design to assume people only want to read something the size of a paperback.
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Date: 2009-02-12 07:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-02-12 07:36 pm (UTC)I don't think it's a failure of ergonomic design so much as trying to make an initial device that appeals to the largest number of people possible. A smaller-than-letter size device is MUCH more appealing for the majority of people for whom eReaders are useful. Eventually, one presumed that the market will open up to the point where more specialized devices for people whose needs aren't covered by the mass-market devices will happen. eInk can be scaled to larger sizes -- it's just a matter of needing to do what's best to grow the market first. I think the astoundly weird feature set of the Kindle 2 is good proof that we're still in the "figuring out what consumers want," phase of things.
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Date: 2009-02-12 09:42 pm (UTC)I don't know what market research says about e-reader appeal, but people do read quite a bit of material in magazine sized format. I have a fair number of mass market paperbacks, but I don't actually like that size. The Vintage trade paperback size is pretty close to ideal for me. If I were a hardware guy, and eInk came in screen sizes greater than 10 inches diagonal, I'd homebrew something with a notebook sized screen and Adobe Reader style buttons.