If you actually read outside in the rain, you do not deserve to own books.Sammy Boy (post: 1428023) wrote: Means you can read in sunshine, rain, or hail.
So ancient, yet so flexible. Books rock.
Icarus (post: 1428272) wrote:If you actually read outside in the rain, you do not deserve to own books.
^This.
While I want an e-reader, I'm not going to do away with all the books I've collected when I get one. I mean, honestly, some books have too much import to be reduced to ones and zeros. Books like the Bible, LotR, The Way of Kings, dictionaries, would lose more than mass if packed into plastic and circuits.
That being said, I'm with Q in wondering how the next generation will view this debate.
ShiroiHikari (post: 1435285) wrote:Vinyl records are not superior to CDs, no matter what anybody says. Vinyl records have audible pops and static and it only gets worse over time. Some people are nostalgic for that sound, but it is not technically better than CD-quality sound.
Now, Barnes & Noble has launched Pubit!, which would allow you to self publish eBooks. It is a free direct to device self publishing service that has been launched for its Nook e-reader. All you would need to do is upload your file, and the service runs you through various steps like picking up a cover, a font and other such details, and you would get your final product. Barnes & Noble would pay you a 65% royalty and you could also get your eBook read on Kindle, and get a royalty of 70%.
Cognitive Gear (post: 1435296) wrote:
This is electronic self publishing, and why I think that ebooks are a great idea. Now you can publish your own works and make money off of it for... as far as I can tell, no initial monetary investment.
Blacklight (post: 1436110) wrote:Am I the only one who puts the open book on their face when they're lying down? It's not that I'm not interested in the book, but I do this sometimes. There's no way you can do that with a digital reader. (it's comforting in a way, and books smell good.)
Cognitive Gear wrote:While you are correct about very old vinyl records, new records, or ones that have been well cared for, don't have those audible pops and static. Basically, science tells us why digital will never be as complete as analogue.
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