6:16PM
Weighing in on Electronic Book Readers
There is a lot of hubbub on the internet lately about these document reader devices. Sony has one and now Amazaon is pushing its "Kindle" which also is supposed to do the trick. The idea behind them is to replace your books with an electronic device that displays as well as the printed page. So you can be sitting on your couch or in a coffee shop and read newspapers, blogs, books, or anything else that strikes your fancy. In principle, I think this is a great idea. However, I don't think the existing products are there yet. Let me explain.
I like books. I like their heft. I like the texture of the paper under my fingers. I like rifling through a book with my thumb to find a particular passage. But when I read a book, I don't just "read" it. For me it is a more interactive process. I put checks in margins, underline passages, dog ear pages, draw lines and arrows in the margin, and tear pages out of magazines. I even sometimes argue with the author in the margin. This is usually with non-fiction reading but I've been known to rant with fictional characters as well. That is right, I am a librarian's worst nightmare.
When looking at these new readers I realized there are a few things that just have to be in place before it could be useful to me:
1. The display must be friendly to the eyes. Really!
Screen technology is improving every day. But if I am going to spend three hours reading a screen, it needs to be perfect. I saw the Sony reader in a store and it actually looked pretty nice. For 10 minutes. I don't know how it would feel after hours.
2. Universal Access - PDF
I added the letters "PDF" during the edit of this story. Because I can think of no other way to pull this off. Any system that requires me to wait on Amazon, Apple, Sony or any other corporate gang is not going to cut it. Whether I am reading a 1903 legal decision or an article on recent changes to Applescript, I want it in my electronic reader. Furthermore, I'm not sure I like the idea of everything having to be text. With the PDF format, you can have unique formatting, styles, and pretty pictures to boot.
Using PDF's would also help solve the problem of dicey book DRM. As it stands with Amazon's reader, you pay $400 for the device, then $10 for a book, then $15 for a newspaper subscription. It is in a format that can only be read on that machine. Who is to say there will be anything that can read that file five years. On the other hand, I am looking forward to passing on my copy of Camus' "Myth of Sisyphus" to my daughter when she graduates high school. It is well worn, well annotated, and DRM free. Good luck with that one Amazon.
3. Annotation Must Be Supported
Without annotation, I think this would be nothing more than a toy for me. Fun for reading fiction but useless for "work". I am open to ideas on this annotation but doubt anything can beat my current analog system consisting of a few pencils. This technology exists on current tablet based computers but that is really not good enough. The pixelation is horrendous and clunky.
4. It Must Be User Friendly
I've promised myself I will no longer purchase consumer electronics that look like they were designed by a monkey. Call this my Apple bias but it is not. I just like things that work well and were designed with idea of accommodating me more than some manufacturing equipment in Taiwan. The Sony reader looks stylish enough but it falls apart when it comes to features. The Amazon Kindle just strikes me as ugly. It reminds me more of my old Atari 800 computer more than anything designed in the 21st century.
The things that I don't need in a reader are a bunch of internet bolt on applications. No email or productivity applications. Wifi would be nice for obtaining content but I am not even convinced I would need a browser. At least not a browser in the traditional sense. I would prefer a simple way to wirelessly sync content and annotation.
As the technology gets smaller and cheaper we may find that the idea of a reader is simply a passing fancy. The 2007 equivalent of the personal jet pack. If anyone gets tablet computing right it could easily include these features with a few more. The advantage of a reader would, hopefully, be a lower price but with the increasing use of flash ram and better electronics, we may just leap frog the digital reader entirely and use tablet.
So there you have it. Could a device like this exist in the near future? Sure. Does it exist? No. So it looks like I will just have to continue abusing books. For now.
Reader Comments (1)
I used to read ebooks on my Psion 3a & 3c and Series 5 a decade ago they all did an excellent job of storing and presenting a book in a convenient manner. The text could be enlarged as needed, the text could be set to scroll, etc. The amazing thing about the readers on these handheld PDAs was that the software was freeware and I am indebted to the generosity of the individuals who made those apps. For some reason I could never sit at a PC and use reader apps.
As mobile phones have replaced PDAs reading a book isn't something I can imagine doing again (I'm not an iPhone/Touch user so that may be different). I wouldn't buy a device like this and I don't need connectivity in such a device. But if Apple brought out a new Newton... well maybe.