How Apple could make e-books work
#57
Posted 28 August 2008 - 08:03 AM
#58
Posted 28 August 2008 - 08:18 AM
Why is this thing so ugly? It's stunningly ugly. I want one, just not the Kindle.
Please... Apple... get involved in books. SJ is wrong about the # of readers out there, just like he was about the # of people who'd want to watch video on small-ish screens.
Someone needs to shake up Jeff Bozos. Maybe inserting a Kindle or two would teach him a lesson?
#59
Posted 29 August 2008 - 08:00 AM
#60
Posted 29 August 2008 - 08:24 AM
#61
Posted 29 August 2008 - 09:31 AM
Let's face it. From this thread it is apparent that the reading experience that one desires from a digital book is highly personal. Some of the posters here have stated that they can't see any digital reading experience being suitable for reading of any length. While others have stated that the size of the screen is a limiting factor. And still others can only accept reflective displays. All of this means that there isn't one perfect digital book reader, but probably many based on user preferences.
And, I don't think that the iTunes store meets all user preferences either. ITMS is my store of choice for music, but for audio books, I prefer Audible, for Movies Netflix. The reason I prefer Audible and Netflix is because they offer a subscription plan. That is not something that Kindle or iTunes currently offer.
#63
Posted 01 September 2008 - 07:06 AM
First off I've been reading eBooks for years and have a smaller library. I tend to read when I get 5 minutes here.. 10 minutes there. For me this means that i don't have a dedicated reader but instead use my cell phone. I'm currently on a Blackberry Curve and had a Pearl before that. On screen size.. that's just fine for me.
As for format.. I get most of my books from FictionWise (They picked up the eReader guys of course). One of the reasons I stay with them is I can redownload the non-DRM book into another format when I need to or when I change devices.
I would like to see a dedicated reader like a larger version of the touch. I think the problem with adoption is related to the entry cost. There are a lot of people that are not going to plunk down $350 for a device that only reads books. The current iTouch/iPhone could function as a entry point for some if a decent reader is put in the mix. I'd love to see MobiPocket put out an OSX reader since that has been my main reader for years. When it comes down to it people don't want to loose a portion of a library just because of format.
Eric
#64
Posted 01 September 2008 - 07:36 AM
As for size, I don't see why size is such a big issue for text reading. You read one word at a time, or maybe a short line. If you had a reader that scolled at a controllable speed, with a short line of text, I think you could read at good speed. You would hardly move your eyes. I recall a system for crash learning used by some government agency that worked like that. It even stopped when you blinked.
The display could be small, but it should be high resolution, more than most monitors, maybe 200 dpi or more, and lit, but also readable in daylight. For technical references or graphics, a laptop computer would make much more sense.
#65
Posted 01 September 2008 - 08:59 AM
I also like listening to audio books a lot, but I read much faster than the readers speak, so for pulp fiction, reading on the iPhone is great. For poetry or great literature, savored like fine wine, audio books are wonderful.
#66
Posted 01 September 2008 - 09:30 AM
Check it out.
Pat Bauer
#67
Posted 01 September 2008 - 10:02 AM
If Jobs says people don't read that should be a clue
The iphone isn't going to make ebooks happen. The screen is too small.
Students on campus are not going to be reading their texts on an Iphone
The only reader that works ( for people without microscopic vision) is the iRex. It is the optimal size.
It uses Mobipocket and pdf so getting books is no problem. However the text zoom feature is from the 1980s.
In a perfect world Jobs would make a reader iRex sized with iPhone capability.
It is not going to happen.
#68
Posted 01 September 2008 - 12:29 PM
The most brilliant part of the Kindle?s business model to me is the free broadband wireless connectivity. Even though I spend an embarrassingly ludicrous amount of money each month on technology charges and am a chronic ?new adopter,? I would be very reticent to fork over even another $19.95/mo for yet another data service. That would have been a non-starter for me for the Kindle.
However, paradoxically the reason I didn?t buy a Kindle at its rollout was that I thought it operated on the iPod model, where you download material to your computer and then synchronize it onto the Kindle. The instant I looked a little more deeply into the Kindle and found out about the FREE wireless connectivity, and that the phone also has a FREE web browser which can by the way do email - I immediately ordered one.
The Kindle has blown away ALL expectations I had for it. I know that there have been ?liquid ink? displays for a couple of years now capable of doing 30 fps color, which would let the Kindle do streaming video, etc., and I know that the Kindle could almost effortlessly be at least a basic cellphone - it is after all already on the Spring 3G network.
But the more I thought about it and used it, the more I love the fact that the Kindle is first and foremost a BOOK READER, and is wholly optimized toward that end. I don?t want instant messages popping up while I?m reading. I don?t want the Kindle to ring with a phone call. I don?t want 30 fps color animations. I LOVE it that the Kindle is a BOOK READER. It?s greyscale display is absolutely exquisite for book reading - the brighter the light the better it looks - and unlike backlit displays, it is effortless to read, the page is exact optimum size for reading, and when you?re reading you can simply set it down and the Kindle is happy to keep the page rendered until hell freezes over allowing you to simply pick it up at any time and resume reading - just like a.... BOOK!!... all without worrying about burning out the screen or draining the battery as with computer- or phone-like devices.
Add to the above that the Kindle has a built-in ginormous dictionary which can instantly connect to google or wikipedia for further info, can add bookmarks and annotations, backs up ALL OF THE ABOVE and stores it with YOUR COPY of the book on amazon?s servers so that they are always available no matter what, and you have a BRILLIANT, perfectly integrated system.
The only tiny quibbles I have with the Kindle?s physical design are that the next-page, previous-page tabs are way too big and prone to accidental page turning, and that the lower corners are pointy and can dig into your palms when you?re holding it. Miniscule complaints compared to the overwhelming pleasure of using the device and reading books (and magazines and newspapers) on it. I hugely prefer reading books on the Kindle to reading them in print.
Lastly, and IMHO most importantly, can you imagine the environmental impact if even a modest portion of all readers used the Kindle? How many millions of trees, barrels of oil and acres of landfill would this device save? And what about in developing nations, where even without wireless networks, textbooks could be delivered to local computers and downloaded to classroom Kindles for pennies per student?
I find the Kindle, exactly as it is, to be a truly paradigm shifting device and breakthrough for the planet; a perfect resourcing and implementation of available technologies.
#69
Posted 01 September 2008 - 05:52 PM
#70
Posted 02 September 2008 - 09:59 AM
The issue has been the elevated cost of audio (or electronic) books (as opposed to the cost of the same edition in a paper format) . . . most of the group of Rocket fanatics balked at paying prices we believed were inflated for an edition that no longer required shelf space and would never go out of print and could be made available on demand from the public. We believed the initial cost of production would be recouped by the publisher in no time . . . but that we the public we being charged way too much.
It's my opinion that the electronic book reached it's full potential in the invention of the Rocket eBook and the subsequent offerings by others have fared no better. Unfortunately I am beginning to have an electronic graveyard of devices . . . and I'm very hesitant to acquire more devices . . . .



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