- cross-posted to:
- randomcrosspost@sh.itjust.works
- cross-posted to:
- randomcrosspost@sh.itjust.works
My old person trait is that I think ‘ghosting’ is completely unacceptable and you owe the other person a face-to-face conversation.
My old person trait is that I think ‘ghosting’ is completely unacceptable and you owe the other person a face-to-face conversation.
Likely an outdated one, or one that’s already been given a number of times, but – Physical Books.
I’m not entirely ‘anti’ e-reader, the benefits are obvious. I’m just VERY pro physical book.
I don’t use an e-reader, but I found a long time ago I prefer audio books to physical books.
Its purely a comfort thing. I can read a lot faster than any audio book, but I just have a hard time finding a comfortable position to read a real book.
Also the added benifit of listening in the car, while working, or falling alseep.
The only times I find myself with a physical book is reading technical things like textbooks, or when I’m on a plane.
I love physical books, but I love eReaders more. I’ve loved digital books since before digital books existed.
My love for digital books started when I was in college, and was lugging around a backpack full of fucking heavy dead trees. I spent countless hours fantasizing about a future where I could carry my entire library around in a single, small device.
You often see the lament: “it’s the future! Where’s my flying car‽” But, my friend, we are living in the future, one where my most cherished desire - the ability to literally fit every book I own into a single portable device - has come true.
I even have a second device, the dimensions of a standard US sheet of paper, on which I can write and easily read PDFs formatted for print; I can even run OCR on the notes and get pretty good results - this eliminated the endless, unsearchable notebooks that were my second plague. One day, this device will be foldable, and I’ll be able to combine the two uses into one device.
I do still own, and occasionally buy, paper books. When I do, they’re books I’ve already greatly enjoyed, and want to have hard-bound copies of. I curtail this behavior, as I’ve moved home a dozen times in my life already, and each time culled large portions of my library. For years, nobody accepts paper books, and they mostly go to recycling, which I always fine painful. It’s one of the worst parts of moving, choosing either to haul around more heavy boxes or send less cherished books to be destroyed. The books I do buy are destined for the bookshelf; I buy these only for nostalgia, and it is unlikely that their spines will ever be broken.
My true love is e-ink; my library exists both on my computer (backed up) and on my eReader, always and fully accessible whether at home or travelling, and never taking up more space than a notepad. I had moved on long before the means to move on were available, and have never looked back.
If you’re in the UK, next-time you’re forced to do a cull, try to see if you can find (or just start) a Bookcycle/Shelfcycle nearby. There aren’t many yet but they’re growing. It’s a charity explicitly designed to do a better job of valuing donated books than existing infrastructure. They worked out that places like schools in developing worlds can often make great use of the books that other charity shops would destroy because they don’t sell quickly in UK charity book shops. So Bookcycle sells the ones that would to raise funds to send the ones that wouldn’t as a donation to communities that would value them. They try really hard not to destroy any book that someone might still find value in somewhere.
Great suggestion, thanks! I’m personally i the US, but next time I need to purge my bookshelves, I’ll look for a similar program here.
Physical books are amazing and I’ll always buy physical copies of the ones I love. Looking at it from cover to cover and taking in the cover art, the smell of the pages, the sound of it as you rustle through pages, the thunk when you close the book shut after finishing it. Not to mention just staring at all your books in a bookshelf and reminiscing about them. It’s a lovely thing. You can’t get that experience with eReaders and smart devices.
But I do purchase eBooks because I love the convenience. I prefer to buy DRM-free versions but they are difficult to obtain due to modern publishers. When I’m forced to buy one with DRM, I always break the DRM so that I can archive them and use them on any device I wish. Knowledge should be free, always.
I read somewhere that most people who read actually prefer physical books over e-books. The thing is a lot less people want to read now.