It's been interesting to watch and read all the mixed e-reader opinions out there. There was something on The One Show on TV, reluctant author meets advocate of e reader at Hay Lit Fest and is persuaded to sample. Returns to programme to bemoan all aspects, Bryn Terfel happens to be sharing sofa (well mostly occupying sofa actually, he's a big lad) and is thrust into the argument, results inconclusive because Bryn loves his iPod and thinks this may be the bookish equivalent.iPods haven't stopped us going to hear Bryn sing (well only me because I'm not a Bryn fan, nice chap all the same ) and of course e-readers won't stop the publication and sale of books in its tracks, it's just another tool to add to any reader's kitbag. Bit like bloggers add something to the world of litcrit, there's room for everyone and everything and I am no luddite about progress, the e-reader is progress.The Tinker has taken to his in a nano-second, installed everything far quicker than I did because he's methodical and reads the instructions in the right order and is now enjoying some Kipling.
Now being a technomuddler I couldn't possibly predict what happens
next, but I guess the technology will improve, probably add in a bit of
wireless gizmology, the cost will come down eventually and then I read this and realise that actually it's moving at the speed of light already, the PRS 700 is on its way.
In terms of transferable skills (my buzzword of the moment) I suspect these will be enormous, our children would have loved it, would probably have encouraged reluctant reading sons no end and I can see it would have its uses for studying. Yes I agree, you can't underline or jot on it but you can't do that to library books either. Glossing quickly over all the awkward copyright issues imagine being a distance learning student and being able to download specific books from an academic library onto an e-reader? It has a bookmark facility so pages are easily retrievable.
Meanwhile expect the dovegreye-reader to feature on here occasionally because I will continue to use it and theme-clothe it appropriately and whatever you do, don't miss Bookseller Crow's budget version, a sort of 'Pony in his pocket', actually I think he's suffering the early symptoms of e-reader envy.
In fact, hopefully not any time soon but be sure to bury me with mine, fully charged of course, in case I get 'there' and I'm bored and perchance there are no books.
cupboard. I don't do a lot of reading in a cupboard so I decided I could more usefully (for me) do a test-run in the Tesco's coffee shop (more of Sons and Lovers).Sometimes I can find my reading concentration in busy places like this shot to pieces by someone else's conversation about Auntie Vi going off her legs, (and then wishing I was in a cupboard) so this would be an ultimate test of immersibility in the text. No book in my hand, no pages to flick back and forth through my fingers, no cover to look at, no scribbling, just a screen, heavens would the e-reader hold my attention at all?
Ashburton and to a backdrop of loudly conversational grown-ups who seemed to have forgotten they had toddlers with them.
In fact I'm not doing very well at being critical so far because I can't even go along with the moans and groans about the page-turning mechanism because I have hardly noticed that. It's a bit like a tumble-turn in a swimming pool (well I can't do one but am assuming), just don't wait until you've touched the wall before deciding to do that roly-poly thing.You know the end of the page is approaching so you time the flick (which turns the page momentarily into a negative image) as you scan the last few words, but just before you get there. Sorry told you this might be muddletechnology and the page turn is so momentary you can have no idea how long it took me to catch it on camera for you.It's gone in a nano-second.
prototype e-reader jacket will have pockets and pen holder incorporated somehow somewhere.
Meantime, while I'm bonding with my Sony e reader and this time I have read the instructions properly, (I never read instructions, I just plunge in impatiently and guess and then get it all wrong) why not find yourself a copy of the latest edition of


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