[Air-L] e-books

natalya godbold ngodbold at gmail.com
Thu Mar 10 21:52:44 PST 2011


I don't read books off a screen (yet.  Maybe one day I'll be mad for kindle
like my dad).
I usually find myself working with an interface that allows me to print 10
pages at a time.
so I do that, and then often I scan it back into a PDF and save that on my
computer so I can find it again.
And with the printout, well I do a lot of reading on the train, with a pen
in hand... and it all gets scribbled on.
;0)

What do you mean by "unreadable" though?  After a few pages?  What changes
after the first page or two?
As an ex librarian, I know people often can't work out how to turn the
pages... but that's not what you mean is it.

n


-- 
Natalya Godbold
PhD Candidate (Human Information Behaviour / Health Communication)
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
University of Technology, Sydney




On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 11:48 AM, Jonathan Sterne, Dr. <
jonathan.sterne at mcgill.ca> wrote:

> Hi All,
>
> I'm just curious.  How many people actually read e-books in the DRMed
> format that publishers provide through a browser interface?  I'm at Stanford
> this year, which has lots of titles in electronic form.  But many of them
> are unreadable past a couple pages.  A .pdf that could be displayed on an
> e-reader device would be fine, but I can't see sifting through a web portal
> that lets me do a whole lot less than what I could do with a physical text.
>  If I really want to read the book, I get the physical copy or see if
> there's a .pdf floating around.
>
> Best,
> --J
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-- 
Natalya Godbold
PhD Candidate (Human Information Behaviour / Health Communication)
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
University of Technology, Sydney





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