Tim Gray, writing in the New York Reviews of Books, has a very interesting article that asks whether it has become impossible to find the uninterrupted blocks of time that are needed to read serious works of literature, and whether the change in the reading environment is also changing how books are written.
Ordinarily I ignore the "Computer Bad! Destroy Society!" arguments, but I have to say that what he describes seems all too familiar. I can't recall the last time that I actually sat down for two or three hours just to read.
I grew up spending hours each day, every day devouring books of all sorts. Is this a thing that's lost to people raised with Internet, Game Consoles, and Smartphones? Pardon me if I sound like an old fart.
(Score: 1) by archshade on Wednesday June 18 2014, @09:55AM
E-ink is dead? I have not seen any big changes recently or even many new products, e-ink seems to have matured rapily to a niche (that it fills well) and nothing new is coming, doesn't mean it's dead yet. I personally prefer reading on an e-reader (Kindle paper white 6"), this does not mean I want an e-ink phone or laptop.
Although there is a possibility that just something different is good, as I spend most of my day using an LCD screen. I find the screen particularly good for reading in bed because LCD seems to keep me awake. My e-readers battery life is also 25-30x longer than my tablet. This means I don't have to worry about not being able to read if my tablet dies, and not having to waste battery time on reading. For me this is especially useful as I frequently take a coach from Den Haag (NL) to Manchester (UK), a trip that goes down to France across the channel and back up. On these long trips my tablet usually dies before its over (I use it to listen to music and watch videos so).
I used to use my tablet for reading e-books (Moon Reader) but found that an hour reading(my commute to uni includes a 30min train ride) seemed to really reduce battery life (my tablet is always on and will last a weekend with light use, including context aware networking). I have tried reading on my laptop but It always feels odd (I can't justify this it just does not feel right). I appreciate this seems to draw arbitrary differences because I will read websites, manuals, and data sheets on a laptop.
It is worth separating out the kindle from Amazons e-book service, I generally read Free(gratis) books usually found though Calibre and have bought ~£5 of books from Amazon (wanted to try it and had a gift card). really the service is to expensive and ownership to transient for my liking.
There are two things I would like changed on the Kindle
For me e-reader with e-ink screens have value, I still think there a bit expensive and I would not rush out and buy one if mine broke, I would wait for the sails. I would replace my Tablet immediately and for much more money, which shows that the tablet is more useful. Just because e-ink has little value to you does not mean there is no benefit to anyone. and I sure some of the advocates on the other site were shills. but spending 30 mins reading a website or doing some coding (am I the only one who spends as much time with a scrap of paper and pencil when coding as looking at a monitor) is different to sitting down and reading a novel for an hour.