Friday, July 16, 2010

Reading Es


 I am a reader.  Mea culpa.  As a teenager I found it very useful to be suddenly "somewhere else" at a moment's notice.  Bored of living in a small town?  Welcome to Paris.  Tired of your inane neighbors?  Meet my friend Quasimodo.  Or maybe Rikki-tikki-tavi.   

Reading freed me up that way.  So it is no great news flash that reading can be a liberation.  It took Amazon to turn it into a trap.

They've come out with a new Kindle Reader for $189.  And a WIFI-only version for $139.  If I hadn't already paid $400 for the old one, I might have bought it.  But that's not the sort of trap I mean.  Heck, I've paid thousands of dollars over the years for a series of sorry approximations, looking for a usable E-reader.  A Hiebook,  a subnotebook, a netbook, various laptops.  So I am not afraid to throw money at the problem.  It's just that none proved really useful.  My objections were technical.   Primarily to do with the wretched  screens.

My current objections are to the Amazon business treatment of Ebooks.  It turns out that a new Ebook  generally costs as much as a paperback.  And at that price the paperback is simply superior technology.  It is easier on the eyes, has greater contrast,  is completely portable, very durable, doesn't need batteries, and once you buy it you own it outright.  You can lend it out when you finish it.  Sell it.  Or give it away.

And it is unlikely that any vendor will sneak into your house and steal it back from you.

That is exactly what Amazon did last year.  They got into some licensing difficulties with a publisher, and as a result deleted "1984" and "Animal Farm" from the Kindle devices of people who had paid good money for them.  Orwell, of all authors.  Of course they refunded the money.  But they didn't ask permission to take them away half read.  

Apparently you don't buy ebooks from Amazon.  You just pay to check them out for a time, subject to random seizure.   Read fast.  Big Brother is watching.

This is old news.  You can read about it here:  


The Kindle is not properly a reading device at all.  It is merely, as one wag put it, "an Amazon Vending Machine".   

There are two caveats to this conclusion.  For the traveler, there is some utility in a portable book store at desperate moments and in intellectual deserts, where books are not readily available.   Rural America is full of places like that.  When I was in Harrison, Arkansas, last month, trapped in the motorhome by continuous rain, I went to a nearby Walgreens and asked the clerk if there was a book store in town.  "We used to have a Christian book store," she said, "but they went out of business.  Have you tried Walmart?"

I suppose when you are faced with questions like that, the Kindle can seem like a Real Good Thing.

But you don't need a Kindle to read Kindle books.  There are a number of reading apps Amazon has made available free to suck you into their scheme, including Kindle for PC, Mac, Android, Iphone, Blackberry, etc etc.  And here's the best thing of all:  these programs allow you to download from the Kindle store, absolutely free, the first chapters of almost any book you might be interested in, and read them on screen.  

This is an invaluable aid to figuring out what Treekiller Books you might want to actually buy.  Or even obtain at your local library.

So don't waste your time with the Kindle.  But check out the free Kindle apps.

Bob

2 comments:

Jennifer said...

I am already carrying too many books in my RV.

Did your power come back on? (My AC just went out for the second time this week.)

Jennifer

Bob Giddings said...

Hi Jennifer,

Yes the power came back on. And off. And on. And off.

Things seem back to normal this morning. But for a while there I was back in the cave, peering out to catch the unfriendly glint of yellow eyes.

Never did see any. Predators were busy elsewhere, I suppose. Except for Amazon.

Concerning which, I'm no longer full timing. So storage isn't a problem. And even if it was, there's a lot of pleasure in passing volumes on when you finish them, without the uncomfortable feeling that all these electrons may be sucked into the ether before I convert them into memories.

Regular books are am impressive bit of technology, when you stop to think about it. No recharge necessary. And if you drop one you're not done with it.

Do you have an Ereader in your Mini?