Will Digital readers replace books?

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Will Digital readers replace books?

Postby rocklobster » Thu Sep 23, 2010 5:47 am

I've heard about how Ipad and Kindle let you upload books to read. Now I'm curious. Does anyone think this will replace books altogether? Do the authors even get any money out of this?
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Postby Yuki-Anne » Thu Sep 23, 2010 6:24 am

My feeling is no, because there will probably always be people who love the feeling of a book in their hands, and the experience of turning the pages.

It could happen, though, especially if buying a digital reader becomes incredibly cheap.
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Postby Straylight » Thu Sep 23, 2010 6:28 am

No, because a book is a lot simpler than an e-reader, you just open it and start reading. That's a major advantage.
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Postby Syreth » Thu Sep 23, 2010 7:01 am

I don't think books are in danger of going away completely. But that doesn't mean that traditional print media is exempt from being impacted significantly by the proliferation of digital readers.

If I were a commercial printing business owner, I would be looking for ways to adapt my business model yesterday.
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Postby Kaori » Thu Sep 23, 2010 7:04 am

I have mixed feelings about these.

For someone like me living in Japan (not a place where it’s not easy to buy English-language books), a digital reader would be very handy in a lot of ways by giving me an easy way to acquire specific books that I want in English without accumulating a bunch of cumbersome and hard-to-transport volumes.

On the other hand, a large portion of the books that I read have end notes. This may have changed, but when I was in the States over the summer looking at the Barnes & Noble digital reader (can’t recall the name of it), I asked the person who was demonstrating it what it would be like to try to switch back and forth between two pages in different parts of the book, and the answer was that it’s a tedious process that requires pressing several buttons. Not as easy as simply flipping to a page in the back of the book that you have bookmarked.

So basically, right now digital readers—at least ones like what I saw—are okay for any kind of book that you can read from page one to the end in order (a light novel, for example), without ever skipping around or referring to different sections of the book. They are not so handy for:

- skimming
- skipping around; reading out of order
- end notes (this is particularly important for me)
- dictionaries, or any sort of reference book (also important to me)
- marking up your text
- the Bible

I can imagine that those things might change as the technology develops, however—for example, it would be awesome if there were a search function that allowed you to look for a term in a text and go straight to the page that contains it (like Bible Gateway, or an electric dictionary). Likewise, being allowed to write directly on the page with a stylus would be great. But for now, given the type of reading I typically do, a digital reader wouldn’t be practical. "Too soon to say" is my answer.
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Postby CrimsonRyu17 » Thu Sep 23, 2010 7:10 am

Possibly. Especially with today's environmental concern, even businesses are switching over from using paper over to digital tools and computers entirely.

Although I honestly think it's too soon to tell, really.
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Postby Mr. SmartyPants » Thu Sep 23, 2010 9:54 am

Unlike business practices, which strives on pragmatism and efficiency, reading individually is both a leisurely and aesthetic practice.

My answer is no.
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Postby Beau Soir » Thu Sep 23, 2010 10:23 am

I don't think so. Digital readers are expensive and not everyone can afford them. Even if they became incredibly cheap, I'd still prefer a book in my hands. That, and things like textbooks would survive, also probably magazines too, if anything.

I can't imagine big bookstores closing down because of digital readers... and children wouldn't use them. I agree with Kaori on the fact that real paper books are just more practical to read.
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Postby mechana2015 » Thu Sep 23, 2010 11:26 am

Digital readers are useful for some people, but not all people. I would get one if I started to travel a lot since I love to read on planes, and books are a hassle to carry, size wise, when traveling, but for home use it can be a little silly. And nobody wants to hand a 3 year old a kindle rather than a tough cardboard book, and nobody would use the current e-readers to look up car manuals or other paper based information. They're stuck between book and computer with the limitations of both in some ways.

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Textbooks are actually swinging towards digital pretty rapidly now, especially in colleges. Though it'll never make it all the way, I can confidently say that there are digital versions of over 50% of all the current textbooks avaliable already.
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Postby Furen » Thu Sep 23, 2010 1:06 pm

No there's lots of people who would rather have paper books, also if the only way to get it would be online there's a bunch of others and then there are the people that can't stare at electronics and read.

I think I'd be okay with it but I'd prefer paper books to e-books.
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Postby Shao Feng-Li » Thu Sep 23, 2010 1:15 pm

I'd say no. Digital readers are really cool, but nothing beats a book.
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Postby blkmage » Thu Sep 23, 2010 1:21 pm

This the same question as: Will digital x replace [print|discs|phones|cable|locks|etc.]
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Postby ShiroiHikari » Thu Sep 23, 2010 1:24 pm

I don't think paper books will ever go away but I do think magazines and newspapers eventually will.
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Postby armeck » Thu Sep 23, 2010 1:50 pm

no, take cd's for example, it is easy to download mp3's but there is nothing like buying a cd XD
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Postby Etoh*the*Greato » Thu Sep 23, 2010 2:25 pm

armeckthefirst (post: 1426443) wrote:no, take cd's for example, it is easy to download mp3's but there is nothing like buying a cd XD


CDs might be a bad example... They've suffered greatly in the last ten years due to the internet and digital storage. Services like iTunes and AmazonMP3 are great ways to cheaply acquire music pretty much instantly, not to mention rampant music piracy.

Regardless, I take what you say when applied to books and pretty much agree. I don't see books getting phased out any time soon. The feel of them is comfortable and familiar, and they don't suffer quite so badly from rampant overpricing for questionable quality like music does - well, except for text books.
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Postby CrimsonRyu17 » Thu Sep 23, 2010 2:39 pm

armeckthefirst (post: 1426443) wrote:no, take cd's for example, it is easy to download mp3's but there is nothing like buying a cd XD


I wonder if that's what people said about cassette tapes back in the day. Or vinyl records.
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Postby blkmage » Thu Sep 23, 2010 2:56 pm

CrimsonRyu17 (post: 1426446) wrote:I wonder if that's what people said about cassette tapes back in the day. Or vinyl records.

Basically, the answer is that stuff will be replaced once people stop asking if it's going to be replaced.
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Postby ChristianKitsune » Thu Sep 23, 2010 4:11 pm

I think they will be a lot like audio books, people like them, but they will probably never fully replace them.

That said, I like audio books, because I like to multitask... and so when i look them up on my online library, I often get "digital books" in the mix...where you can download the book and read it for up to three weeks.

It's kinda cool, but at the same time not. When I read I really prefer the book in my hands. lol.
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Postby armeck » Thu Sep 23, 2010 5:21 pm

Etoh*the*Greato (post: 1426444) wrote:CDs might be a bad example... They've suffered greatly in the last ten years due to the internet and digital storage. Services like iTunes and AmazonMP3 are great ways to cheaply acquire music pretty much instantly, not to mention rampant music piracy.

Regardless, I take what you say when applied to books and pretty much agree. I don't see books getting phased out any time soon. The feel of them is comfortable and familiar, and they don't suffer quite so badly from rampant overpricing for questionable quality like music does - well, except for text books.


yes i know, but there are still stores with cd's...

CrimsonRyu17 (post: 1426446) wrote:I wonder if that's what people said about cassette tapes back in the day. Or vinyl records.


yes they did (so my dad tells me) but they were replaced with something physical, i've hears people say sd cards will replace cd's but there is still something physical, there digital music, books, instruments, ect. will never replace physical, people will buy physical things because that's what they want... i could be wrong of course, but that seems logical to me.
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Postby Yuki-Anne » Thu Sep 23, 2010 5:58 pm

I don't see the logic in that, because the digital cannot exist without something physical to store it. We're talking about digital readers. They're something physical, but they're more efficient than books. I mean, if we're talking digital vs. analog, then digital took over a long time ago; cd storage is digital. But I use an mp3 player because I can have way more music with a far less cumbersome device. When you talk about instruments, I think what you mean to say is "electronic" vs. "classic." Even electronic things are "physical."

I looked into buying a Kindle before I came to Japan. I kind of wish I had, but then I'm doing ok without it.
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Postby Atria35 » Thu Sep 23, 2010 6:01 pm

I think that certain things will go out of being printed on paper.... eventually. I mean, I would love it if textbooks would go digital (with an easy way to page back and compare stuff, of course!), simply because they are so very, very heavy and expensive. And some books might go straight to digital, but for the most part, I don't think that paper books will ever go out of style.
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Postby AnimeGirl » Thu Sep 23, 2010 6:34 pm

No, I honestly don't think so. Because with electronic devices, you can loose your entire library, instead of just losing one book that you can easily replace. Printed books also LOOK better, you don't have to worry about running out of BATTERY POWER, and you can bring it everywhere! Well, you can also with those Kindle things, but it's only 1 book, NOT your whole library which you can easily lose. And especially with manga....PRINTED is always better! I mean, I LOVE SmackJeeves, I use it for my own comics, but when I read them, I'm all like..."I hope when this volume is done, it'll get published!!!!". There's just something more real about holding a hard copy. And like I said...looks better. And even with plain word books.....it's nice NOT to have that horrible bright white background shining into your eyes when you're reading!!!
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Postby ShiroiHikari » Thu Sep 23, 2010 6:37 pm

I really think textbooks should go completely digital if at all possible, because:

1. Easier to update the information so it stays accurate
2. No need to print and bind them
3. No need to pay shipping costs to distribute them

ETA: I didn't know digital readers even had backlights.
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Postby Cognitive Gear » Thu Sep 23, 2010 7:08 pm

ShiroiHikari (post: 1426474) wrote:ETA: I didn't know digital readers even had backlights.


Most don't. The only one that I know that has one is the iPad, which is not really an eReader. The other eReaders on the market use the liquid paper technology, which reflects light to the eye just like normal paper.
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Postby QtheQreater » Thu Sep 23, 2010 7:14 pm

I think magazines and newspapers are on their way out of print already...especially the newspapers (let's face it, most people would rather read news and articles online for free than pay for something that isn't instantly available).

Textbooks may be next, if our new generation of English professors have anything to say about it. Except for the cheaper cost, I wouldn't be too happy about that, personally (the sound of a ridiculously huge textbook banging on a desk is very rewarding, especially if the person sitting next to you was asleep). Seems to be happening a lot more, though.

We are too used to the book format of reading to make the switch to digital just yet, but future generations who are used to internet and electronic styles of reading might have an easier time. It's an interesting mindset switch: I might enjoy physically making notes in my texts, but will a generation of online readers like it? What about new books? Will they continues to allow us to read in a normal linear fashion or shape themselves into the new style of digital literature (one based off of the ability to instantly reference, link, suggest, etc)?

The new digital writing/literature movement is weird. :eyebrow:
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Postby ST. Attidude » Thu Sep 23, 2010 9:14 pm

I would think no, simply because of what Mr. Smartypants said before; that and physical books don't ever need to recharge...
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Postby Roy Mustang » Thu Sep 23, 2010 9:30 pm

I going to copy and paste what my Fiance has to say about this as her major is in library science.


Answer to the question: Never.

Authors do get a percentage of the profits, just as they do with the in-print books.


However, true "readers" will always have a love of the feel of a book, the smell of old pages, the weight of holding a tome within their hands. That is not to say, however, that readers will not love the benefits of having an e-reader. The ability to carry a multitude of novels all in a package slightly larger than a paperback novel is a wonder to behold! As the popularity of e-readers takes off, there will be a decrease in printed purchases, but after a short while the two will balance each other out, and there will be a market for both.


She said that his topic has came up many times in her classes and from all the info that they get from it, they are not worried about it.

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Postby Kaligraphic » Fri Sep 24, 2010 1:54 am

Personally, I've migrated entirely away from print. I have out-of-work actors portray the contents of my books for me.

Okay, seriously, digital readers have their own inconveniences, and we're not likely to go all-digital any time in the foreseeable future. They'll be significant, sure, as we go along, but they won't take over.
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Postby Nate » Fri Sep 24, 2010 4:57 am

Unlike CDs, which I think will probably be almost completely gone within the next few years, print books are here to stay.

The reasons are obvious. With CDs, you have an extremely limited storage space, and the format offers zero advantages when compared with stuff like iPods and Zunes. In fact, I'd wager these days, most people buy CDs only to burn them and put the songs on their iPod or Zune. Who carries a portable CD player these days? On top of that, you have to physically remove the CD and replace it with another one when you want to hear different songs, as opposed to a storage device which can hold thousands of songs on a player smaller than any CD player can be due to size limitations (after all, you need a player at least as wide as a CD for a CD to fit in it). Finally, CDs are often more expensive than the downloadable music, with most CDs costing 10 or 12 dollars (occasionally more) whereas songs on iTunes can be downloaded for 99 cents or at least usually under 2 bucks apiece...with the added bonus of not having to pay for tracks you don't like on an album.

So again, CDs compared to downloadable music? The CD is garbage, offers nothing. Print books however offer plenty compared to digital books, such as they can be a smaller size, and they don't need to be recharged. Print books are also sometimes cheaper than digital books believe it or not. Finally there's also footnotes/annotations as Kaori mentioned earlier. I'm sure they'll work that out eventually somehow, but it is a problem for the moment. I'm also not entirely positive how easy it is to save a place in a digital book, but a bookmark/piece of paper/folding the page corner down in a print book will save your place with no trouble.

So yeah. There's always gonna be print books. CDs, on the other hand, are gonna go away pretty soon. Some bands will still release them I'm sure. Heck, some bands still do releases on cassette tapes and vinyl records.
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Postby mechana2015 » Fri Sep 24, 2010 10:42 am

Nate (post: 1426547) wrote:Print books however offer plenty compared to digital books, such as they can be a smaller size, and they don't need to be recharged. Print books are also sometimes cheaper than digital books believe it or not.



I love used book stores... it's like treasure hunting when you find something you really want for like...99 cents.
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