Powered by Bravenet Bravenet Blog

Photo by Lasky

journal photo

Subscribe to Journal

Tag Board

manoudornbierer@gmail.com: manoudornbierer@gmail.com
manoudornbierer@gmail.com: manoudornbierer@gmail.com
chien: live in paris like mouche flies in basura http://www.theflytheopera.com/news.php
Vivianight: Good luck with the W.I.P.!Know how it goes, sometimes it is just the act itself which brings the best results for sanity. Cheers
diane: Your books are way cool! Just passing through to say hi...take care and bright blessings!
Kathie: I love your books Nancy , can't wait for the nineth books
Linda: dropping by to say hello and wishing you a great day.
jr: good luck with your next book
Linda Pearl: Nancy, I just wanted to take a moment to thank you, for inviting us into your world. It's so rare to be able to chat with one of our favorite authors, and discuss, this, and that..Kudo's!

Please type in the four characters shown in the black box.

Saturday, November 24th 2007

5:26 AM

ELECTRONIC BOOKS

From what I’ve read, electronic books are becoming more popular. With today’s generation of iPod users and PDA fans, that’s no surprise. Once e-book devices become standardized with a common format, back lighting, and a way to vary the font size, what’s not to like? You could download dozens of books into one gizmo, make the font large enough to reduce eye strain, and carry this reader in a pocket or handbag. Add in convergence of all our different handheld devices, and soon we’ll just have one item to haul around. Will this leave bookstores in the dust? The smaller indies will feel the sting first. The larger chains may have their own download kiosks. But will everyone succumb to electronic fervor? Will libraries with real books become relics of the past? Not if I have any say. I like to hold a book in my hand, manually turn the pages, release a sigh of satisfaction when I close the back cover. I like to leave a book on my bedside table, keep one in the bathroom, and put another in the car. How can you do that if you have only one device? Hopefully, e-books will encourage more people to read, young people who are being raised in the technology age, but they’ll add to the armory of reading choices rather than tolling a death knell. What’s your opinion? Do you have an e-book reader already? Or maybe you’re a fan of both techniques: carry an electronic device in your purse and keep real books at home? Do you see digital libraries replacing our current system?

3 Comment(s) / Post Comment