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: 2009-02-13 05:53 am (UTC)I do keep a small slew of books on my phone, but while the phone is workable as a reading device, the screen just isn't big enough to make it really comfortable for me. It's not a matter of resolution or contrast, you just can't fit enough text on a screen that small for it to be a comfortable "page" size for me. I use the e-books as backup reading material when I happen to not have a physical book with me.
But my biggest problem with e-books is that I have trouble paying significant money for a wodge of data that I download over the net. This isn't an entirely rational dislike, I know; but on the other hand electronic data is rather transitory by nature -- hard drives fail, etc. -- and while I do do backups (not as religiously as I ought to), without some kind of "original media" it doesn't quite feel like I actually own the data. Whereas I have physical books I've owned for decades and comfortably expect to still own decades from now.
Also, as the article notes, the DRM is a big turn-off.
The result is that I'm reluctant to pay physical-book prices, or even most-of-a-physical-book prices, for e-books. Project Gutenberg and Baen provide me with a smallish library of free books, but beyond that I'm disinclined to go at present.