Posts Tagged ‘Kindle’

Digitizing the classics

Posted July 19, 2011 by
in Editorial | 2 comments »

There’s a lot that I love about my Kindle, but a few things I still have reservations about, as well. Many of them seem like the sort of things that will be fixed and refined over time: the keyboard drives me nuts (I keep on inadvertently pressing the space bar when I hold it in my lap), as does that second-long lag when you go from one page to the next. Pressing a button to change the page seems absurdly inferior to the swipe-style tablet interface — probably because it’s less book-like — but I’m guessing it won’t be long before Kindle offers a tablet version, too.

Less trivially, I cannot wrap my head around the lack of pagination. I know it’s hard with so many different devices and screen sizes, but there are just too many location numbers in one book for the number to be meaningful or memorable.

Finally, there are just things that printed books do better. For the past few weeks, I’ve been tackling War and Peace on the Kindle, and while it’s great not to have to lug around the heavy printed tome, it’s also surprisingly difficult to navigate around the text. I have been frustrated to no end by the fact that I can’t simply use my finger to hold my place and flip back to the part at the beginning that lists the characters, their relationships, and their alternate names. Sure, I could (and have) bookmarked that section electronically, but it’s at least three clicks to get there.

Similarly, to get to a footnote, I have to click, click, click, click with the cursor till it’s at that line, click, click over to the asterisk, making sure I don’t go too far or inadvertently start highlighting, click the asterisk, wait, read the footnote, then click the “Back” button and continue reading. And heaven help me if I want to flip back to the previous chapter to remind myself of something that happened! I never thought my thumbs would feel this under-utilized.

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Paper and digital and books

Posted January 3, 2011 by
in Editorial, Pens, Paper & People | 15 comments »

Image via goXunuReviews

By now, I’ve got a pretty workable time management system that includes both paper and digital devices. I’m not afraid of technology — heck, I minored in computer science in college!

When it comes to reading, however, I’m still behind the digital times. I got a Kindle for Christmas and have yet to buy a book for it, even after reviewing all your thoughtful and intriguing recommendations last week. (Instead, I started my most recent paperback purchase, A Computer Called Leo.) I have a good sense that I’m probably going to go for something like the Mark Twain autobiography, which several of you praised and which is huge and unwieldy in hardback. But I can’t seem to pull the trigger.

If you’re reading this blog, chances are you’re a paper enthusiast. That’s certainly part of what’s causing me to hesitate: I love books as physical objects. I’m also seized by this irrational and probably retrograde worry that if I can’t see something on my bookshelf, it may not actually be mine — which is strange, since I don’t feel that way about the music, photography, or writing that’s stored in ones and zeroes in my laptop.

Do you own a Kindle and/or share any of these concerns? How did you get over them?

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E-Book Milestone

Posted July 26, 2010 by
in Editorial, Pens, Paper & People | 7 comments »

On July 19, 2010 Amazon.com, Inc. said it had reached a milestone, selling more e-books than hardbacks over the last three months.

Amazon painted a picture of accererating growth in the the sales of e-books, which can be read on its Kindle device and through software on a host of other devices, including Apple’s iPad and iPhone. Competitor Barnes and Noble offers nook. 

In June, Apple CEO Steve Jobs had claimed that his company’s iBookstore, which had launched in April, had taken over 20% of the market.

Publishers said it is too early to tell whether the growth of e-books is also impacting the sales of softcover books, a huge and crucial market.

Mike Shatzkin, CEO of The Idea Logical Company, which advises book publishers on digital change, said “this was a day that had to come.” Mr. Shatzkin predicts that within a decade, fewer than 25 percent of all books sold will be print versions. Book lovers mourning the demise of hardcover books with their heft and musty smell need a reality check, he warned.

I discussed the impact of Kindle and nook at the Quo Vadis annual meeting in June. It is not so much the proliferation of electronic devices that worries me, since we have lived with them and computer calendar programs for ten years now.

My worry is the loss of bookstores – both chains and independents – and other places that sell books and related paper products like planners and journals. The more we go electronic, the fewer places there will be to buy paper. Many of the independents we do business with are worried; increasingly they have to deal with rising rent and declining foot traffic.

How do you see this Amazon milestone impacting your life?

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Kindle

Posted May 22, 2009 by
in Pens, Paper & People | 5 comments »

I love books. Whenever I need to calm down I visit a bookstore and browse. I love the feel of a book. I like the smell of old books you can find in an antique store. I patronize my town’s little bookstore, even though it would be easier to order from Amazon or Barnes and get it delivered. With summer yard sales and flea markets coming up, one of my great delights on a Saturday morning is to buzz over to the table of books and spend some time going through them. Among them I have found notebooks, diaries and journals 100 years older and more–but that’s fodder for another post.

My partner travels for work a lot, and is also an avid reader. But she is tired of lugging around two or three hardcover books for the trip. Her birthday is coming up in September, and I’m thinking about buying a Kindle for her to use.

Do any of you use a Kindle? How do you find it in comparison with “paper books”? Do you read more using this device? kindle

I wonder what its impact will be on publishing houses and authors. And I worry that Kindle and its competitors may eventually eliminate paper books or tremendously restrict what authors and titles are available to people who prefer to read books in paper.

A February 24, 2009 New York Times article, “The Kindle: Good Before, Better Now” by David Pogue is here.

See Kindle on Amazon here.

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