Redundant technology
Music on vinyl records, mobile phones the size of house bricks and pornography printed on paper. What hideously out of date stuff do you still use?
Thanks to boozehound for the suggestion
( , Thu 4 Nov 2010, 12:44)
Music on vinyl records, mobile phones the size of house bricks and pornography printed on paper. What hideously out of date stuff do you still use?
Thanks to boozehound for the suggestion
( , Thu 4 Nov 2010, 12:44)
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I disagree about books being outdated.
They aren't. They're utterly functional, and that function can't be matched by an e-reader - unless you think, implausibly, that a book is a store of information and nothing else besides.
You'll never be able to pick up an old e-reader and find sand and the stub of a bus-ticket that take you right back to that holiday.
( , Thu 4 Nov 2010, 12:59, 2 replies)
They aren't. They're utterly functional, and that function can't be matched by an e-reader - unless you think, implausibly, that a book is a store of information and nothing else besides.
You'll never be able to pick up an old e-reader and find sand and the stub of a bus-ticket that take you right back to that holiday.
( , Thu 4 Nov 2010, 12:59, 2 replies)
That's such a secondary function it's nearly tertiary.
The technology used to deliver information has moved on from 'printing on paper'. Period.
Nonetheless, you're confirming (what was meant to be) my point here, which is that books are nice. Comforting, solid, tangible, tactile and smelly. Not to mention intensely personal in a way computer files are not.
They're still being inexorably superseded by digital media, which is a bit sad, but on the bright side means that our books will become even more important to us bibliophiles.
( , Thu 4 Nov 2010, 13:06, closed)
The technology used to deliver information has moved on from 'printing on paper'. Period.
Nonetheless, you're confirming (what was meant to be) my point here, which is that books are nice. Comforting, solid, tangible, tactile and smelly. Not to mention intensely personal in a way computer files are not.
They're still being inexorably superseded by digital media, which is a bit sad, but on the bright side means that our books will become even more important to us bibliophiles.
( , Thu 4 Nov 2010, 13:06, closed)
Fithed
And you don't look like a massive wanker reading one on the tube
( , Thu 4 Nov 2010, 14:09, closed)
And you don't look like a massive wanker reading one on the tube
( , Thu 4 Nov 2010, 14:09, closed)
Or buy a second hand book
...with a message on the flysheet from someone you don't know, to someone else you don't know, and wonder about them. Or a "This Book Belongs To:" sticker.
( , Thu 4 Nov 2010, 13:59, closed)
...with a message on the flysheet from someone you don't know, to someone else you don't know, and wonder about them. Or a "This Book Belongs To:" sticker.
( , Thu 4 Nov 2010, 13:59, closed)
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