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Meanland Extract: Regarding the very modern ebook machine thing

Jacinda Woodhead September 16


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At the conclusion of his column in the July/August issue of The Believer, Nick Hornby – a popular novelist with an aptitude for imparting his reading habits – promised:

‘In next month’s exciting episode, I will describe an attempt, not yet begun, to read Our Mutual Friend on a very modern ebook machine thing. It’s the future.’

The future, the one that used to be around the corner but nowadays has converged on the present. Publishers and technologists and corporations predict that the future of reading will be defined by a single portable device (a dedicated eReader or more generalised tablet), similar in size to a printed book, which contains whole libraries of electronic data files known as ebooks. Cory Doctorow joked at his Meanland lecture earlier this month: ‘anytime someone mentions the word “ebook”, everyone crowds closer because they want to make sure the future involves them.’

With the release last week of the Sony Reader – an end to the almost six-year wait for Australian readers – the future does seem to be on the horizon, although antipodeans could be mistaken for thinking it’s trapped in a digital traffic jam. Confusion abounds, especially around issues of Digital Rights Management and how they presently impact eReaders and ebooks in Australia.

In ‘Another mystery: buying e-books overseas’, NYT columnist David Pogue remarked:

It always blows my mind when media companies deliberately prevent us from buying their stuff. When there are certain TV shows you can’t legitimately buy online, in any form. When certain books are unavailable as e-books in any format.



Read the rest of this post over at Meanland


 

 

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