February 18th, 2013

Why Printed Books Will Never Die

From Mashable:

Measured en masse, the stack of “books I want to read” that sits precariously on the edge of a built-in bookshelf in my dining room just about eclipses 5,000 pages. The shelf is full to bursting with titles I hope to consume at some indeterminate point in the future.

It would be a lot easier to manage if I just downloaded all those books to an iPad or Kindle. None are hard to find editions that would be unavailable in a digital format, and a few are recent hardcover releases, heavy and unwieldy.

But there’s something about print that I can’t give up. There’s something about holding a book in your hand and the visceral act of physically turning a page that, for me at least, can’t be matched with pixels on a screen.

Yet the writing appears to be on the wall: E-books are slowly subsuming the printed format as the preferred vehicle on which people read books. E-books topped print sales for the first time in 2011, a trend that continued into 2012. Just this month, Bexar County, Texas announced plans for the nation’s first electronic-only library. A recent study from Scholastic found that the percentage of children who have read an e-book has nearly doubled since 2010 to almost half of all kids aged 9 to 17, while the number who say they’ll continue to read books in print instead of electronically declined from 66% to 58%.

The hits keep coming.

For those who prefer their books printed in ink on paper, that sounds depressing. But perhaps there is reason to hope that e-books and print books could have a bright future together, because for all the great things e-books accomplish — convenience, selection, portability, multimedia — there are still some fundamental qualities they will simply never possess.

Click here to read the rest of the story.

January 14th, 2013

BiblioTech - San Antonio’s Completely Bookless Public Library

From Gizmodo:

The new book-free library, called “BiblioTech,” is intended to open in the fall and is part of a an entire bookless public library system planned for the entire county of Bexar.

And it’s not “bring your own device” either. The library will actually lend out e-readers (of an unspecified brand) for two weeks at a time. There will also be computers and the like, but no books, and presumably no card catalog either.

Click here to read the full story. 

January 4th, 2012

How well do you understand eBooks? Like reeeally understand them?

In a saturated and ever-changing eReader marketplace, it’s easy to be confused.

It could take a month to decipher the differences between the Nook Reader, Nook Color, Nook 1st Edition, Kindle, Kindle Fire, Kindle 3, Kindle DX, Kobo, Sony Reader Touch Edition, Sony Reader Daily Edition, BeBook Neo, Apple iPad and the seemingly endless list of others.

There’s different hardware, software and file types. There are different proprietary formats and different digital rights. Oh, and will a library’s eBooks load on my eReader?

It’s enough to drive a person mad. Or at least enough to swear off eBooks forever.

So, don’t feel silly if you say that you’re confused. In fact, you’ve come to the right place! Cutting through the confusing eBook clutter and staying ahead of the industry’s trends has become a (necessary) top-order for us at CPL!

If you’re ready to finally understand eBooks, you’re invited to join us TONIGHT at our Humboldt Park branch (1605 N. Troy) at 6 PM. We’re presenting a free introduction to Chicago Public Library’s downloadable eBook collection.

We’ll cover everything you need to know, but were too afraid to ask — including how to use our eBooks with your eReader. Plus, new mobile apps for smartphones and tablets!

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