Many new releases have design elements usually reserved for special occasions - deckle edges, colored endpapers, high-quality paper and exquisite jackets that push the creative boundaries of bookmaking. If e-books are about ease and expedience, the publishers reason, then print books need to be about physical beauty and the pleasures of owning, not just reading.
This brings up the double-edged sword: you can correct actual factual errors in real time, which is wonderful, but this also could make life rather difficult for people who cite those (erroneous) facts unintentionally and use them to further research, policymaking, etc. as they wouldn't be able to go back and say "I got my information here" because the information wouldn't be there anymore. (Or, as someone in the comments section brought up, facts can be more easily changed subject to political necessity.)
Like Harvey "Two-Face" Dent, a new dual-screen device has two faces to match its double identity: It promises to be an electronic book reader and a netbook at the same time."> text/html; charset=iso-8859-1