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Book Burning
Well not really burning, book disposal, book dismissing, book elimination.
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Yeah, who needs books when Wikipedia knows everything? :rolleyes: It may work for some, but I'm not comfortable with this change. Firstly, not all the books are available on electronic media, which means every student researching a topic will be limited to the same few resources. And making notes in the margin would be difficult. :haha: Secondly, reading for pleasure on the electronic media doesn't work for me... curling up with a good flatscreen doesn't fulfill my tactile needs. My magazines keep pushing me to subscribe online. For some reason they don't understand why that doesn't work while I'm in the bathroom, eating lunch at work, or waiting for something sitting in the car. Oh and when you're out in the woods, try wiping your butt with a kindle. |
I think about all of the books in my public library and how many of them are available in electronic format.
Anyway, it's all fun and games until some engineering students hack into the giant flatscreens and broadcast porn.:right: |
I agree that books give a satisfaction and tactile experience not replicated by digital words. I find it very hard on the eyes, too.
I DON'T agree with the statement about magazines. Online magazines are great! I love magazines, but they pile up so and create clutter. And I have no problem perusing them in the car, at work on my lunch hour, or in the bathroom at all . . . that's what the iphone is for. I read fiction on my iphone, too, tho' not usually "books." I have the entire works of Shakespeare on there, for instance. |
I'm appalled. The great thing about electronic media is it increases accessibility.
This is reducing choice not increasing it. Ridiculous. |
I think that what is interesting is a university going this route might be a useful push in the direction towards digital archiving of the more obscure texts. Their sacrifice in the short term might accelerate the wider accessibility in a few years.
I can understand how, particularly on an older, more established campus, there would be a shortage of space to dedicate to digital media on that scale, thus necessitating the End of Books. Presumably they would maintain interlibrary loan access for a few years, to fill the gaps. |
Don't be confused... this is not a University. It is a boarding school for high-school aged kids.
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Ahh. I thought it was a university.
Our uni is involved in a project to digitise a lot of old and obscure texts. It also has one of the largest research libraries in the country...actually, I think one of the largest in Europe. I pray they never decide to make an either or choice on that. |
and they're encouraging their high school students become wired on caffeine, too
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don't all public school districts do that? i thought it was common practice :rolleyes: -Recently, they moved the coke machines out of the elementary schools here. except ours because it has a public access swimming pool. They're supposed to turn the vending machines off during school hours, but they don't,
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I have not tried a Kindle. I read once that the picture view of the text has a more book-like read? |
books or digital? I suspect this topic will be with us for some time. Many of you may have seen that recent CNN article about the future of libraries in the digital age:
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Here's an interesting blog post in response to it: Today's librarian, hip, delusional, and doomjed Quote:
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I am not keen on the Kindle. It may suit some, not for me.
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The Kindle uses e-paper, which is essentially a densely-packed array of tiny beads that are black on one side, white on the other. Each tiny bead is one pixel, and it just flips from white-side-up to black-side-up when the pixel is "on." It requires no power to remain in position once set, hence the very low power usage over time.
It's got very good contrast and is much easier on the eyes than LCD, but it isn't backlight-friendly due to the opaque materials used. I think it would be super-cool to just have a basic page of e-paper with a wireless/bluetooth connection, modest amount of onboard flash memory (~1GB) and a scrollbar. It would be an inexpensive, portable, passive reader... much like a magazine. It wouldn't be intended for any long-term storage... just upload a bunch of reading and clear it off when done. But that is unlikely to happen with DRM gumming up the works, and with places like Amazon trying to marry their devices to their online stores. |
Glancing over the article, my take is that some administrator is trying to score points by appearing "cutting edge." I see this in my industry too.
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I'm a geek. So I want to like the ebooks. But I like to read while I eat (when I'm by myself) and very often I'll read while scratching Mrs. Dar's back.
So until they make them impervious to corn curl orange crud (for example) and light enough to hold comfortably in one hand for an hour or more, they won't be a good substitute. |
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