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E-readers infiltrate book clubs – SiliconValley.com.

I’m definitely on the e-reader bandwagon, but not 100% of the time.  For instance, one of my favorite summer activities is to float around the pool and read light summer / beach content.  No way I’m taking my $500+ e-Reader of choice anywhere near the water.  Maybe if the Kindle dropped to $75 or so…

Why do I prefer eReader (currently Motorola Xoom) for my books?

Free content. Have you seen how many books are out there for free?  Seriously, I could probably legally never pay for another book in my life and never lack for content of interest or pay another $0.01 or physically visit another library.

Portability is huge since I travel a fair amount and read more while travelling than when I’m not.

  • Slim single device can carry books that are 8 times the thickness and weight (using Winston Churchill biography as benchmark).
  • Single device can carry multiple books.  Not that I wasn’t able to manage to carry “the next book” when travelling and knowing I was almost done with a book, but I tend to read on groups of topics.  Consequently, I may be reading a book on history that ties into a topic or events in previous books I’ve read.  It’s nice to be able to jump to the other book on the spur of the moment and read some cross-reference material.  Books I’m reading that reference the Bible are the perfect case in point.  I have the Bible in at least a dozen versions on my eReader.  I couldn’t carry even two different versions and my current book while travelling, let alone, unpack and deal with them in the tiny seating space of a plane.

Search and markup. Note the discussion of cross-referencing books books above.  When I want to find something in whatever other book I’m cross-referencing I not only have it readily available, but completely searchable by phrase and even quickly scanning my highlights and notes.

Highlights and notes. No more realizing the highlighter I have in my PC bag dried out and won’t work.  No more misplacing a book and not being able to find my notes on a particular topic or passage.  Some eReaders are even supporting community use such that you can share and see the notes of others in the book you’re reading.  Tied into the article above, this would definitely facilitate book club interaction and depth.

Consistent experience. I’m not sure why, but I tend to read big books.  This means that if it is a hardback it has large pages and is heavy.  If a paperback it is thick.  Either way, this means that I need both hands on the book most of the time.  Also, depending on the print, I have to manage where the book is distance-wise from my eyes to have the text in best focus.  These issues disappear with an eReader.  I can sit my Xoom in it’s case on my lap and go hands free only clicking the right-hand side of the screen to move to the next page.  Likewise I can set the size of the text to whatever size I want based on where I put the device and how my eyes dictate as I get older.

  • Subpoint here with regard to bookstore specific devices.  Yes, an iPad or Xoom is more than a Kindle, Nook, Sony, etc.  You could probably get 3 of the above for the cost of an entry level multi-purpose tablet.  However, you’d then be blocked from some content only available on other “stores”.  On my Xoom and previously on my iPad, I had access to every electronic “store” including Amazon Kindle, Barnes & Noble Nook, Borders, Google.  I always start my shopping at Amazon, but they don’t always have a) the book at all or b) the best deal.  No problem, I have all the other options available to me.

A book is a book is a book regardless whether it is printed on paper or displayed on a screen.  I take a bit of exception to the referenced article above separating content on an eReader as not a “book”.  The words are the book.  Even as I’m writing this I’m tempted to say that audio books are not “books”, but if the words are the book, then how you get the words is immaterial.  Is reading a book flipping paper pages a different experience than flicking you finger across a screen or tapping the edge of a screen?  Yes.  Is listening to a book driving down the road different than visually working through the words in text?  Most definitely.  Still at the end, when each type of “reader” sits down to discuss the book, so long as they got the words, then they have common ground to discuss and ideas to kick around.

For me, I just don’t pay near as much attention when listening as I do when reading, so audible books are just not of interest to me.  I love paper books and love having shelves full to have friends and family look over and pick from for their own use.  However, for purely practical reasons I prefer to get my books electronically going forward.  Since I put eReader software on my portable devices my reading habit has taken a huge upsurge and that’s a very good thing.

 

Apple plugs 57 major security holes in iTunes | ZDNet.

57!?  Wow, no wonder I hate that piece of software.

Like I’ve always said, Apple is given way too much credit for being “more secure” than MS.  Truth is that there hasn’t and still isn’t enough of a userbase to provide enough ROI for attackers to focus on attacking it.  If the user community sizes were reversed, MS would have the claim to “more secure”.

 

Mosques Flourish in America; Churches Perish in Muslim World :: Raymond Ibrahim.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, Islam is radical by nature and anti-freedom in principal.  No wonder that Islam is at war against the west in general and America in particular.  When will we remove our tolerance blinders and take this threat seriously?

 

Victor as usual hits it on the head.  The problem with California is its people who think more like Mao than Madison and suffer the resulting curse.  Too bad their ideas spread like a plague throughout the rest of America.  I hope California falls into rubble so all can clearly see that liberal socialism is hideous and have their minds set back toward freedom, liberty and capitalism.

I’ve never regretted rebuffing the many offers / attempts to get me to move to the left coast in my life.

via VDHs Private Papers:: Jerry Brown, Modern Sisyphus.

 

VDH’s Private Papers:: The War Against Palin Goes On and On and.

Really stop and think the next time you want to say, “I really like Sarah Palin, but couldn’t see her as President”.  Why not?

I’d vote for her tomorrow and sleep much better with her in the white house than with any democrat and 99% of any republicans considered as contenders. 

No one can legitimately claim she is less experienced than the “organizer in chief”, heck, almost no one with at least a college degree who’s held a private sector job for more than a week can be claimed to be inexperienced or unqualified after Obama.

 

Android tablets, smartphones: Mozilla Firefoxs best shot at mobile relevance | ZDNet.

Folks seriously think that FireFox will run better on Google Android than the native browser given Google also makes Chrome?  I never got on the FireFox bandwagon as it never impressed me as faster (it still takes forever to load), the famous ‘addons’ just made it slower, I encountered frequent site compatibility problems and I’ve never had a security problem with IE.  Now that Chrome is out, I can’t imagine why FireFox even exists.  It is faster, cleaner, has extensions (aka addons) and I’ve never encountered a compatibility problem.

How it will run on other systems is another matter, but given how poorly it holds up against Chrome today and given the positive buzz around IE 9, I think FireFox’s best days are behind them.

 

Verizon and Apple iPhone could make some LTE magic | ZDNet.

Too late.  I already discovered Android and have found it superior.

 

Meet BlackBerry Playbook, a tablet PC from RIM | ZDNet.

First thoughts:

  • Too little:  I don’t neeed something that is merely 7″.  If it isn’t the same size screen as an iPad, I’m really not interested in using it for… well anything.  I have a powerful phone with a large enough screen to do interesting things with, but if I want to watch video or read a book or browse the web, the screen needs to have enough real estate to be readable and show a lot of content without a lot of zooming.  I actually wish the iPad was another 0.5″ – 1.0″ bigger diagonally, but definitely no smaller.
  • Too bloated:  I was tempted to say too powerful, but that really ties into my next point so lets go with bloated.  Yes, this will be a secure enterprise ready device.  It will also be a complete bear to deal with as a mere consumer.  I strongly suspect this will only be adopted by those whose enterprise IT shops won’t allow them to use an iPad or Android device for enterprise work.  The only people I know with BlackBerry’s admit they only have them because their company won’t support anything else… yet.
  • Battery life?:   i.e. too powerful.  One of the articles I read on the press event noted that not once was battery life mentioned.  I strongly suspect that is with good reason.  All those connectors, drivers, underlying crypto and high res screen come at a huge power cost.  Add in the smaller form-factor reducing the battery size available and I see a huge market for add-on mobile power-packs or replacement batteries if they are removable.  That is of course if there’s any adoption of these.

My verdict:  No honkin’ way do I want one of these things.  Not interested at all for any reason.

 

Googles Android leapfrogging over iPhone, BlackBerry, Windows – SiliconValley.com.

I’ve had a Palm, BlackBerry, Treo, BlackBerry, iPhone, Android phone over the past decade and the BlackBerry, iPhone and Android in the past year and definitely understand why Android is so popular so fast.  While I really enjoy my new iPad, I really, really wish it was running Android.  I can’t wait for a similar sized Android tablet with more than the stupid, “one button”, single app at a time, nonsense from Apple.

People like Apple devices, but do they really like Apple software?  Will Apple lose their leadership position again by committing to keeping the software and the hardware unified while Android pulls the Microsoft coup by building software that runs everywhere else?  Early indications say, “Yes”.

If I was a stock player, I’d short Apple and Nokia and buy HTC and Google and maybe Samsung.

 

Android isnt surging just because Apple is letting it | ZDNet.

I agree with this article and definitely take issue (as does this author) with the fact that iPhone’s user experience is superior to Android’s.  I completely, 100% disagree.  I had an iPhone given me to use for work and really didn’t take to it very well.  It was an early version, but I found the lack of simple things like multi-tasking, no cut-n-paste, no Flash support really disconcerting.  Consequently, when left to my own devices (pun intended), I went and got an Android Incredible.  Awesome!  This behaves exactly as I expect my mobile device to work.

Last week, I took delivery on a new iPad and again ran into many of the same frustrations I had with the iPhone only now magnified as I was spoiled after several months with my Android.  I was also surprised to find that while there are a great many apps on the Apple Store, it appears from my searching that a higher % of them cost money while there is a huge amount of free content on Android’s store.  Now I do love my iPad because of the form factor, but woe unto Apple when a similar form-factor Android device comes available.

Long story short, Android is earning its way, but Apple has given it a hand up by it’s AT&T exclusivity contract.

P.S. Oh, and AT&T morons… ya want high margin sales, then perhaps stocking iPad accessories would be a good place to start.  I had to drive by probably a dozen AT&T stores to get to the Apple store to find accessories for my new iPad after stopping at the first 2 AT&T stores and being told “go to the Apple store”.

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