Log In

Home
    - Create Journal
    - Update
    - Download

LiveJournal
    - News
    - Paid Accounts
    - Contributors

Customize
    - Customize Journal
    - Create Style
    - Edit Style

Find Users
    - Random!
    - By Region
    - By Interest
    - Search

Edit ...
    - Personal Info &
      Settings
    - Your Friends
    - Old Entries
    - Your Pictures
    - Your Password

Developer Area

Need Help?
    - Lost Password?
    - Freq. Asked
      Questions
    - Support Area



elfwreck ([info]elfwreck) wrote in [info]otf_wank,
@ 2009-12-03 19:36:00


Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Ebook drama!
This is *fascinating*. Really. I never get to see real ebook drama; it's usually "oh, I could never give up the smell of real books!" vs "umm, 300 books in my pocket, yay!" And then there's some mumblings on both sides, and they both move on and read books on whatever media tweaks their kinks. But not this time!

I bring you... Alan Kaufman vs Mobileread!

Who, you might ask, is Alan Kaufman? I don't know! Apparently, he's written some books. And he blogs about writerly things. And a little over a month ago, he wrote The Electronic Book Burning, in which he compares ebooks to Nazis:
The book is fast becoming the despised Jew of our culture. Der Jude is now Der Book. Hi-tech propogandists tell us that the book is a tree-murdering, space-devouring, inferior form of technology; that society would simply be better-off altogether if we euthanized it even as we begin to carry around, like good little Aryans, whole libraries in our pockets, downloaded on the Uber-Kindle.
Serious Godwin points for that. In an opening salvo, even. (It's okay, folks, he's Jewish, and that makes it okay for him to compare technological advances to the Holocaust. Erm.)

What's Mobileread? A website devoted to ebooks, ebook sources, ebook devices, and people who read ebooks. It's big. And active.

Mobileread, with its membership of 50,000 ebook aficionados, who range from copyfight fanatics to language purists to casual Kindle readers, are interested in *anything* about ebooks. And ebook author Steve Jordan posted a discussion thread: Kaufman links e-book trend to bookburning, Nazis.

Of the 19 pages of comments, 10 are from the last few days, because Kaufman had to return to a thread that had been moribund for almost a month to post A Statement From Alan Kaufman, author of 'THE ELECTRONIC BOOKBURNING' To My Mobile Read Critics. He makes sure to link back to his original rant essay, in case any of us were incapable of clicking back to the beginning of the thread.)

He has some new things to say!
But this is not a Gutenberg moment: it is a Nuremberg moment--a linguistic and cultural mass murder of the human mind; an economic Krystallnacht against the book, book culture, literacy and human freedom. We are witness to the ghettoization and deportation of our language and literature to the internet,where it will surely perish.
Pixel-stained technopeasant Nazi wretches. Widespread distribution of literature=bookburning! Mobileread promptly hands him the pieces of his ass from several directions. But he can't leave it at that. And, of course, since he has no actual *point* to make, he can't reply to the questions (like, where did you get that claim that America is 25% illiterate?) or issues raised--so he makes yet *another* bloggish post in the middle of a long, long thread: A Further Response To His Mobile Read Critics.
For you are merch-juggled children breastfed on marketing strategies hatched before you were born and are so fully inculcated with h-tech propoganda that it is safe to say that with few exceptions virtually your entire generation haven't the capacity to interrogate your own experience vis a vis the addictive, soul-numbing machines that have become mocking substitutes for your human experience.
My, check out the big brain on Brad Alan! And in case you thought his brain was the only thing big about him:
So, I'd like to extend the following invite to any on this site. Lets thumbwrestle for three shirtless private rounds in an alley of my choice, and see who's left victorious: my 6'2”, 200 pound, tattooed, 57 year old military veteran Bronx-born poetry writing streetfighting ass or your nerdy and ignorant Silicon Folly digitized selves.
That's right: you ebook geeks are so pathetic, I can beat you up! (At thumbwrestling. Wouldn't want anyone to accuse me of threatening real assault.) But he is capable of actually replying to a person: Dear FlorenceArt,
Yours is actually the sole reply from among 230 postings here that resonates with me (I have read each and every one: a private survey of e-book readers, to unearth signs of intelligent life: yours is the only evidence that I've so far found).
Because insisting that several dozen replies full of insightful discussion points (and a handful of minor wankish digressions) contain no signs of intelligent is a *sure* way to convince people that you're right!


(Read comments) - (Post a new comment)


[info]undomielregina
2009-12-09 05:36 pm UTC (link)
There are a lot of library systems that already offer e-books, and apparently they're popular with college students because of the convenience. Most libraries handle it by contracting with a service that then allows a certain number of people at a time to download the book onto a reader/computer/whatever. It's handled the same way that movie rentals on iTunes work -- when the borrowing period is up, the file automatically deletes off the device. So libraries are already working on adapting to the change. Imo, if e-books really take over library collections, library systems are going to have to maintain servers to store their collections so that they can control their collections more directly rather than relying on a service, though.

My professors/classmates disagree, but then, they still squawk every time I suggest that e-books are going to take over. I'm 90% sure that everyone who sees "within 50 years" mentally translates that to "in the next decade" for some reason. It's not happening yet. It's not even going to happen soon. But I think we'll see e-books as dominant by the time every single person currently posting on Journalfen is a senior citizen. Among other things, that would make us all the dinosaur generation who can't adapt, which has a nice direct analogue to computers.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]tachikoma01
2009-12-09 07:27 pm UTC (link)
That's a very good answer, and one that I hadn't been getting when I'd been poking around. Unfortunately though what I got when I poked around was a lot of "Libraries? Who uses THOSE anymore? We all have private computers and internet connections oh hey my middle class privilege, let me show it to you."

Maybe I just use overly complicated google search terms. I have a tendency to do that.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)


[info]undomielregina
2009-12-09 07:34 pm UTC (link)
I think this is more the result of the fact that I'm working on my MLIS degree and took Collection Development and Management this term. No need to google when the professor tells it to you outright :)

I'll add that imo, one of the requirements for e-books replacing books is getting the cost of readers down into the $50 or lower price range. That's still a significant outlay of cash, but nothing compared to the current $200+ pricing.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


(Read comments) -

 
   
Privacy Policy - COPPA
Legal Disclaimer - Site Map