The Future of Reading - 11/1/2009 - Library Journal - 0 views
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Clearly something important and fundamental is happening to books and reading. Libraries need to be part of this reading revolution, supporting and defending the rights of digital readers, experimenting with new reader services, collecting new genres and media formats, and providing access for all readers to the devices, networks, content, and online communities that will continue to emerge.
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To that end, I suggest that libraries and library associations develop, promulgate, and defend a Reader Bill of Rights for the Digital Era. Here are a few draft planks: • The reader should be empowered and able to control the mode of reading on his or her e-reading appliance of choice. Specifically, a TTS feature should be available for all books. TTS is not an audio performance. It enables auditory reading, a mode of reading gaining in popularity. Readers should be able to switch quickly from visual to auditory or tactile reading and back, with olfactory and gustatory options if/when they are developed. • The reader should be empowered and able to control the presentation aspects of the ebook. For visual reading, this includes factors such as font size, font type, font color, and background color. For TTS audiobooks, this includes factors such as a male or female voice, playback speed (sans Alvin and the Chipmunks), choice of accents (e.g., British, Australian, American Midwest, American Southern for English), with similar accent choices for other languages. • Readers, individually and in groups, have the right to add to and embellish a text, as long as the embellishments (e.g., notes, highlighting, marginalia, new characters, new episodes) are clearly distinguishable from the primary text. • The reader has a right to save and share these embellishments, or keep them private.
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Librarians should encourage—nay, aid and abet—experimentation in reading. We need to cleave to the needs and wants of readers. We must continue to study their reading habits, then design and redesign our content collections, systems, and services to help them improve and maximize their reading experiences. We are in a long-term commitment with readers.
E-Book Sales Rise in Children's and Young Adult Categories - NYTimes.com - 2 views
Kirkus Reviews - iPad Apps | Kirkus Book Reviews - 1 views
Does the Internet Make You Smarter? - WSJ.com - Clay Shirky - 0 views
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Reading is an unnatural act; we are no more evolved to read books than we are to use computers. Literate societies become literate by investing extraordinary resources, every year, training children to read. Now it's our turn to figure out what response we need to shape our use of digital tools.
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There is no easy way to get through a media revolution of this magnitude; the task before us now is to experiment with new ways of using a medium that is social, ubiquitous and cheap, a medium that changes the landscape by distributing freedom of the press and freedom of assembly as widely as freedom of speech.
How the E-Book Will Change the Way We Read and Write - WSJ.com - 0 views
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atest such moment came
Best Buy and Verizon Jump Into E-Reader Fray, With iRex - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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iRex Technologies, a spinoff of Royal Philips Electronics that already makes one of Europe’s best-known e-readers, plans to announce that it is entering the United States market with a $399 touch-screen e-reader.
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The iRex has an 8.1-inch touch screen and links to buy digital books in Barnes & Noble’s e-bookstore and periodicals from NewspaperDirect, a service that offers more than 1,100 papers and presents them onscreen largely as they appear in print form.
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The iRex can also handle the ePub file format, a widely accepted industry standard, which means that owners can buy books from other online bookstores that use ePub and transfer texts onto the iRex.
5 Ways That Paper Books Are Better Than eBooks - 0 views
How E-Readers Change the Way We Read | Head Case by Jonah Lehrer - WSJ.com - 1 views
Read all about it! Device owners read more books, magazines and newspapers | Technology... - 0 views
British Library to offer free ebook downloads - Times Online - 3 views
Will Books Be Napsterized? - 0 views
Does the Brain Like E-Books? - Room for Debate Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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5 authors present their opinion on whether the brain likes ebooks by suggesting whether it depends on discipline towards distractions, how the reading practice is shaped, the focus is on the words or whether ereading opens up a more social experience. But ultimately is one able to experience "deep reading."
Libraries check out the eBook | Project Gutenberg News Portal - 1 views
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