Sunday, October 28, 2007
« Stop Big Media Last Chance 9am Rally an... | Main | [ECP] The Educational CyberPlayGround C... »
Steve Johnson, Chicago Tribune "Internet critic", writes today about his surprisingly positive experience using his Blackberry as an e-book reader. I say "surprisingly positive" because Steve Johnson was surprised, e.g, "Like most English majors...I had scoffed at the idea of a novel translating to digital format." An excerpt: "I just read 'Pride and Prejudice' on my BlackBerry. And, reader, I liked it. Against all my own prejudices, all my own pride in the history and tradition of the printed word, I liked it...The experience taught me that a book is not what I had thought it to be. It is not, in any important sense, typeface, paper stock or cover art. A book is, foremost, the arrangement of words in sequence, and they are, to borrow a buzz-phrase from the digital folk, platform agnostic."
Sunday, October 28, 2007 12:00:22 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Related posts:
The Curious Adventures of Mr. Wonderbird
"Who Controls the Internet?"
Wind Power
NetHappenings: Anna Patterson and Tom Costello launch cuil.com
July 29 health blogisphere event
Library of Congress on DMCA, Copyright Law Troubles

Comments are closed.