When I took a cross-country bus trip in the early '80s, I took along a selection of fringe religious magazines and read them openly the entire 3000 miles. Kept seat cruisers at bay for the whole trip.
That cartoon reminds me of this little gem: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Cd7Bsp3dDo
I spend most of my time travelling, and today couldn't live without my Kindle. For longer trips, I used to take 3 to 4 books with me, then buy another 2 or 3 during the trip. I now have over 200 with me at any one time. I agree that there's still something special about a "real" book (which I do still buy from time to time if it's a reference book or the occasional first edition novel) but E-readers are great substitutes for throwaway paperbacks and the like.
You have piqued my interest: one person's fringe is another's mainstream. What were some of these periodicals?
What e-reader screen flickers? I'm in the market for one and would like to know what to avoid.I'd take a book over a bright, flickering screen any day. It is a shame that they're not all made out of hemp though.
This reminds me of visiting my grandparents when I was a kid. My grandfather kept a supply of classic crime, detective, horror magazines in the bathroom.It's a great book to read in the bathroom.
Based on what I've read so far it appears the basic Kindle is a very good e-reader.
Reviews note the e-ink pearl display mimics the traditional reading surface. It doesn't have the bells and whistles of devices looking to compete with the ipad.
At 70 bucks it's a very affordable option.
I'm not that concerned about the reading habits of creatures 10,000 years from now.
Another thing you can't do with a Kindle is walk into someone's house and get a good grasp of their personality from what's on their bookshelves, whether it's current best-sellers, genre books, coffee-table volumes, old textbooks, or The Classics. If you go into my living room and look around you'll see a mixture of 1930's agitprop, technical books on radio writing and production, obscure Bible commentaries, collections of humorous essays, Ellery Queen mysteries, baseball histories, and P. G. Wodehouse, which tells you about as much about me as you need to know.
E-Readers may be convenient, but they take a lot of fun out of visiting a friend's home for the first time.
This is an interesting point. For years, in my abodes there have been bookcases filled with books, cabinets first with record albums and cassettes, which dissolved into CDs, and a stereo in more than one room.
These days, there's no shelves, no books (most have been boxed and moved to my office at school), no records, tapes or CDs, and no stereo. My recorded music is on my computer and ipod, and radio-type music comes through the TV from cable's music channels, which broadcast by theme.
Except for the books, it's not that different, except maybe being easier - the music part, that is.
I think I'm gonna put up a book case in the office here at home and put some of my books back.
I don't know whether they flicker or not to be honest. However, I do know that using a PC too long is like staring into a light bulb...
What e-reader screen flickers? I'm in the market for one and would like to know what to avoid.
This reminds me of visiting my grandparents when I was a kid. My grandfather kept a supply of classic crime, detective, horror magazines in the bathroom.