Friday, January 18, 2008

eBooks v/s Ink n Paper - Economic Times - 18/01/2008

Net books are cool, but readers still love their ink and paper

Robert MacMillan NEW YORK



THE number of people subscribing to newspapers may be shrinking as they flock to the internet, but electronic book readers won’t shred the market for ink, paper, glue and binding anytime soon.
After years of promises and false starts, booksellers and technology companies are diving into the world of digital books. Sony is selling the Reader Digital Book for $299, while giant online shopping company Amazon.com offers the Kindle for $399. New readers are lighter than the average hardback fiction best-seller, easy on the eyes, and let readers carry around as many as 200 titles in hardware that weighs less than a pound.
But to some people, there’s something missing. “It’s, I guess, the feel of holding a book that someone really put a lot of effort into writing, and you kind of lose that a little bit with a digital product,” said Katy Farina, 21, of Montgomery, New Jersey.
Farina, a student at the Minneapolis College of Art & Design, was browsing at the Borders bookstore near Madison Square Garden. As shoppers lined up at closing time, the subtle, comforting aroma of books permeated the store.
“It feels real, whereas (the reader) kind of separates you a little bit from the story,” Farina said.
Harry Howe, who had picked up “Surrender Is Not an Option” by former U.S. Ambassador to the
United Nations John Bolton, said he might use an e-book reader for blog or website material that he wanted to read while away from home, but not for reading a novel. “It’s just not a physical experience that I’m yet comfortable with,” said Howe, 55, who teaches accounting at the State University of New York’s Geneseo campus and lives in Rochester. “On the other hand, I didn’t grow up reading things on various websites.”
Farina said she would like a reader for travelling because she would not have to transport so many books. This is something that HarperCollins Publishers Worldwide Chief Executive Jane Friedman said is a prime advantage.
“To put 10 books on your Sony reader or on your Kindle is a lot better than carrying 10 books,” she said. Readers often shy away from using the devices until they discover how pleasant reading on them can be, Friedman said.
“I was always the person who said, ‘how can you have any kind of experience but the tactile experience of holding a book in your hand?’,” she said. “And I still feel that way about certain books; but I don’t feel that way about every single book I read.”
Sony’s eBook Store offers downloads through its own software to a buyer’s PC. The volumes are then sent from the PC to a Reader Digital Book through a USB cable.
And for people wavering between paper and pixels, Sony does offer a concession — an optional leather cover. “I think it’s a shrewd move,” said Howe. “How retro is that!”— Reuters

Hymn book goes online
LONDON: Churches across the world are able to sing the Lord’s praises online after the launch of the first major digital hymn book on Thursday. Mission Praise — which has sold more than 2m copies as one of most popular hymn books in Britain and around the world — is now available at www.missionpraise.com. Visitors will be able to search through more than 1800 songs and — for an annual subscription of $79 per book — download words, sheet music, accompanying audio backing tracks. — Reuters

No comments: