I dont like ebooks.
- LoniJo
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Re: I dont like ebooks.

- vanillacake
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- perusaphone
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- Fran
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Not terribly economic if you only want one application & the remaining 29,999 are surplus to requirements.Lakelander wrote:Come on guys and dolls, get real! Stop making excuses and allow yourselves to be persuaded into the 21st century even if kicking and screaming. Non of us like change,but you'll get used to it and soon appreciate the advantages and convenience of electronic reading. Incidently, I would suggest that Tablets are the way to go. For say $400 you get 30,000 Applications, with a $100 eReader you really get only the one. It's all a question of value for money.
I try to keep in mind the question "do I need it, or do I simply want it?"
I love my Kindle but I also still love the regular book format, in the same way that sometimes you want Champagne and sometimes you just want a cup of tea.

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- perusaphone
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So, if one wants and needs to be a clone and join the 21st century and have everything done for you, simplified and electronically sterile, then go for it, a great many do not want it..... !!!
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- Fran
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Isn't that what marketeers do .... convince you that you need something when in point of fact you only want it?Lakelander wrote:Re. Post 22. Very true Fran, if you only have use for an eReader. However, a Tablet is a very difficult kettle of fish, being as they are mini laptops. I reckon we are all going to find we need one for everyday living, as the price hopefully drops and the 21st century grinds on.

Don't get me wrong, I love technology & as I think I've said on another post my job is technology based but I don't see any contradiction in someone loving and wanting to retain an older format be it books or games or simply the bicycle!
There are downsides to becoming totally technology dependant & in our rush for novelty we shouldn't forget that. ther.
But IMO to each his/her own.
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- InOnePhrase
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Are people who listen to music on iTunes instead of buying vinyl records "clones"? They're experiencing the same art, the same information is being fired into them. The only arguments I've heard against e-books seem emotional, as fear of the future always is. Paper books won't exist in a few generations, and I don't think that's sad at all; the content of books will be the same as it always was.perusaphone wrote:So, if one wants and needs to be a clone and join the 21st century and have everything done for you, simplified and electronically sterile, then go for it, a great many do not want it..... !!!
- Fran
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I agree to a degree but I spent a couple of happy hours earlier today in a little second-hand bookshop run by a charity for the mentally challenged & I parted with a few EUR coming away with 5 nice purchases. Despite liking my Kindle I still think it will be a sad day when these shops disappear & a big loss in terms of a way to gently while away a few pleasant hours & assist a worthy cause in the process.InOnePhrase wrote:Are people who listen to music on iTunes instead of buying vinyl records "clones"? They're experiencing the same art, the same information is being fired into them. The only arguments I've heard against e-books seem emotional, as fear of the future always is. Paper books won't exist in a few generations, and I don't think that's sad at all; the content of books will be the same as it always was.perusaphone wrote:So, if one wants and needs to be a clone and join the 21st century and have everything done for you, simplified and electronically sterile, then go for it, a great many do not want it..... !!!

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- InOnePhrase
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You're absolutely right. I completely forgot about the people who depend on the format, probably because I've exclusively bought my books online for years. My mistake. Bookstore owners deserve as much sympathy as the switchboard operators or milkmen who watched the world move on without them. And, as you say, the ones who have a noble cause, far beyond simple employment, deserve far more. I will wish that charity all the best as they're forced to pursue other avenues to do their good work.Fran wrote:I agree to a degree but I spent a couple of happy hours earlier today in a little second-hand bookshop run by a charity for the mentally challenged & I parted with a few EUR coming away with 5 nice purchases. Despite liking my Kindle I still think it will be a sad day when these shops disappear & a big loss in terms of a way to gently while away a few pleasant hours & assist a worthy cause in the process.