As technology changes the medium has to change. Think * tracks, cassette recorders, floppy disks, and soon CD’s.The file may exist but will be inaccessible unless you have functioning equipment that they don’t sell anymore.
A ‘reader" is maybe 1% of a book; it has words – though briefly. A book works in sunlight, doesn’t get dead batteries, and looks, feels & smells like a book.And as any archivist will tell you, if it’s not eye-readable, it’s not preserved. Microfilm (only medium other than paper that will last 150 years)? Get me a magnifying glass. Electronic file? Pretty much history as soon as it’s made.
Fair enough, but each medium has its place. Camera phone pictures won’t last forever, nannynew says; but then neither will Polaroids, besides which maybe 0.01% of camera phone pictures are worth keeping for more than one week. As for books, well, not every book is THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV. WINDOWS 8 FOR DUMMIES will be obsolete before the DVD; there is no conceivable reason to by such a book on high-quality, acid-free paper so that your grandkids can enjoy it in decades to come. The vast majority of books are fluff, or evil (yes, there are evil books), or on a topic which makes them obsolete after a few years. (Any textbook on astronomy suffers this last fate due to the pace of discovery.)
Tirasmol over 9 years ago
They are.
gammaguy over 9 years ago
Live long and prosper.
whiteheron over 9 years ago
As technology changes the medium has to change. Think * tracks, cassette recorders, floppy disks, and soon CD’s.The file may exist but will be inaccessible unless you have functioning equipment that they don’t sell anymore.
Sportymonk over 9 years ago
The DVD is ironic as they too are almost dead. In fact they are more obsolete than books.
NoCents over 9 years ago
Those book were bound to turn on them sooner or later.
Ubintold over 9 years ago
Digital readers do a pretty good job for reading.
zeexenon over 9 years ago
While a Kindle is a step in the right direction, they rate about 41% of a book. Microsoft’s Reader was much closer, on my PDA, perhaps 95%.
Cozmik Cowboy over 9 years ago
A ‘reader" is maybe 1% of a book; it has words – though briefly. A book works in sunlight, doesn’t get dead batteries, and looks, feels & smells like a book.And as any archivist will tell you, if it’s not eye-readable, it’s not preserved. Microfilm (only medium other than paper that will last 150 years)? Get me a magnifying glass. Electronic file? Pretty much history as soon as it’s made.
AtariDragon over 9 years ago
Fair enough, but each medium has its place. Camera phone pictures won’t last forever, nannynew says; but then neither will Polaroids, besides which maybe 0.01% of camera phone pictures are worth keeping for more than one week. As for books, well, not every book is THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV. WINDOWS 8 FOR DUMMIES will be obsolete before the DVD; there is no conceivable reason to by such a book on high-quality, acid-free paper so that your grandkids can enjoy it in decades to come. The vast majority of books are fluff, or evil (yes, there are evil books), or on a topic which makes them obsolete after a few years. (Any textbook on astronomy suffers this last fate due to the pace of discovery.)
AtariDragon over 9 years ago
“buy”, not “by”
Thomas & Tifffany Connolly over 9 years ago
I mean, really, just because they were here first! WOW! The unbelievable self-importance.
anorok2 over 9 years ago
They are!…..They are!
spaced man spliff over 9 years ago
They are-for reading. But on hard drive is good to, for when the book falls apart, so it can be remembered and re-written.