Author
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Topic: How will we collect astronaut-signed e-books?
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garymilgrom Member Posts: 1966 From: Atlanta, GA Registered: Feb 2007
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posted 04-06-2016 08:48 AM
I bought the Kindle version of Buzz Aldrin's new book "Not Dream is Too High" yesterday. How are we going to collect signed e-books? Sign the back of the device?! Not with new products coming out hourly. I wonder if a signature page could be programmed into these, so you could have someone "sign" with their finger (or electronic pen on some devices). I like the convenience of e-books but I love collecting signed paper copies. Could these be combined? |
OV-105 Member Posts: 816 From: Ridgecrest, CA Registered: Sep 2000
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posted 04-06-2016 09:21 AM
Buy the electronic for reading a print form for autographs. |
fredtrav Member Posts: 1673 From: Birmingham AL Registered: Aug 2010
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posted 04-06-2016 09:23 AM
Sadly the day will come when there will be no paper editions. |
Robert Pearlman Editor Posts: 42981 From: Houston, TX Registered: Nov 1999
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posted 04-06-2016 09:26 AM
quote: Originally posted by garymilgrom: Sign the back of the device?!
Not the back, but I know with at least the iPad, the device's covers can be swapped out fairly easily. Perhaps publishers will come out with low cost device covers that feature the cover art of the book that could then be signed, traded among collectors and the like. |
MarylandSpace Member Posts: 1336 From: Registered: Aug 2002
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posted 04-06-2016 09:42 AM
quote: Originally posted by fredtrav: Sadly the day will come when there will be no paper editions.
I think author George Orwell had a premonition of something like that. |
Hart Sastrowardoyo Member Posts: 3445 From: Toms River, NJ Registered: Aug 2000
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posted 04-06-2016 11:02 AM
quote: Originally posted by fredtrav: Sadly the day will come when there will be no paper editions.
I'm going to disagree with this. Paper has more of a permanency than electronic documents — no one knows whether in a hundred years an e-book will be a jumble of free-floating electrons and unreadable, whereas a piece of paper will be legible.As well, yes, I do have a smartphone, but only because of work. I don't have a tablet or e-reader. I like being able to go into a bookstore and pick a book at random and read it, or buy a newspaper or magazine on a whim during lunch and read. I don't want to lug a tablet or e-reader around and I don't want to buy something, read it, and then be disappointed as well as miffed that I wasted money I hated reading. Sure there are free previews, but I want to flip though the whole book before deciding to buy it. |
Robert Pearlman Editor Posts: 42981 From: Houston, TX Registered: Nov 1999
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posted 04-06-2016 11:16 AM
quote: Originally posted by Hart Sastrowardoyo: I don't want to lug a tablet or e-reader around...
Given the direction e-paper is going, the digital readers of the future will be paper-thin, light, foldable, inexpensive and disposable. It will be that development, I believe, that will begin the real migration away from physical paper as the norm. But that is decades away. |
Hart Sastrowardoyo Member Posts: 3445 From: Toms River, NJ Registered: Aug 2000
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posted 04-06-2016 11:46 AM
Once that happens, and a stable power source is developed where an electronic page can be displayed just about indefinitely with no "monitor" burn, then autographs will be given onto such e-readers. Download the book, have the author physically sign the title page - like having already-framed photos signed on the glass - hang it up or place into specially-made albums, buy another e-reader. |
Robert Pearlman Editor Posts: 42981 From: Houston, TX Registered: Nov 1999
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posted 04-06-2016 11:51 AM
And just to point out, with one model of the Kindle Fire priced at just $50 — only about twice the cost of a physical book, if even that much — one could almost justify buying one to be autographed for a single e-book today, assuming one were so inclined. |
p51 Member Posts: 1642 From: Olympia, WA Registered: Sep 2011
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posted 04-06-2016 06:27 PM
I worked for a newspaper in the late 80s and even then, people were saying that paper would be a thing of the last in the next 10 years.So here we are SEVERAL years after that, with no end in sight for the printed word. Book sales are still doing very well, both in retail and used. People do like digital versions of stuff but there's still a huge segment of the population that either cannot use it due to not wanting to learn a new technology or can't due to their remote location (nowhere near a Wi-Fi or cell signal or charging station in the middle of nowhere). |
Grounded! Member Posts: 367 From: Bennington, Vermont, USA Registered: Feb 2011
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posted 04-06-2016 06:34 PM
A few years ago, I had the privilege being able to contribute (in a small way) towards the rewrite of an astronaut-authored book, and was quite pleased when he thanked me in the acknowledgments. It came out in e-book only format. If it was released in the form of a physical book, there would be 10 copies on my shelf. I know it is the way of the future, but do authors and those involved in the process of bringing a book "to life" get the same level of satisfaction using the electronic formats? |
Hart Sastrowardoyo Member Posts: 3445 From: Toms River, NJ Registered: Aug 2000
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posted 04-06-2016 07:06 PM
quote: Originally posted by p51: ...either cannot use it due to not wanting to learn a new technology or can't due to their remote location
There's one other factor: The cost of web access. I still believe there is a digital divide, and if you don't perceive internet access as a necessity, that will be one thing you will get rid of (or have a slower speed), much like people dump their TV or lessen their TV package, when they are on a tight budget.Until homes are wired for internet access as a matter of routine, like putting in electrical wiring or water pipes or TV cable outlets, this will always be the case. |
p51 Member Posts: 1642 From: Olympia, WA Registered: Sep 2011
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posted 04-06-2016 07:54 PM
quote: Originally posted by Grounded!: I know it is the way of the future, but do authors and those involved in the process of bringing a book "to life" get the same level of satisfaction using the electronic formats?
NOPE. I know a few professional writers whose publishers only released their works as e-books. None were happy with that.Don't forget that many authors are also readers, too. |
Robert Pearlman Editor Posts: 42981 From: Houston, TX Registered: Nov 1999
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posted 04-06-2016 08:02 PM
There are authors who are proud of their e-books. For example, Andy Chaikin was happy with his John Glenn e-book. And Andy Weir had no expectations of ever publishing "The Martian" as anything but a serialized web journal and then reader-requested e-book. (I know he was glad about a publisher picking it up, but the e-book process worked for him, too.) |
mjanovec Member Posts: 3811 From: Midwest, USA Registered: Jul 2005
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posted 04-08-2016 05:54 PM
quote: Originally posted by Robert Pearlman: But that is decades away.
I'm not sure about "decades" away. Considering the advancements of tablets and e-readers over the past decade (basically going from non-existent to the point where they are almost everywhere and very affordable), I can see huge advancements in the technology over the next decade... perhaps even reaching or exceeding the point you describe above.I think paper books will still exist for quite a while to fill a certain niche, just as vinyl LPs still exist for music lovers. But they may become more of an oddity, marketed as a collectible edition than as a standard edition. In the meantime, I suspect many books will offer a print-on-demand edition that can be ordered. It won't be cheap as compared to the e-version, but it will offer an alternative for us Luddites who still prefer paper. |
p51 Member Posts: 1642 From: Olympia, WA Registered: Sep 2011
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posted 04-08-2016 07:18 PM
Consider also the refusal to adopt certain technologies among the public at large. Just because you see several people (possibly people in your social circle) doing something, it doesn't represent the majority. Some technologies are simply considered not worth the effort by many. For example, Blu-ray disc sales are WAY under what the industry predicted and they're collectively scratching their heads at why an obviously superior technology to DVDs isn't selling nearly as much as they thought it would. Heck, I haven't even bought a Blu-ray and have no intention on doing so until my DVD recorder konks out someday. The history of technology is filled with good ideas that were probably great but that the public simply never embraced in numbers. Reading devices are here to stay, but there are countless reasons why you won't see an abandonment of paper anytime in the near future, because there are so many situations and places where a tablet simply isn't practical like a well-worn paperback will work much better (and cheaper)... |
Hart Sastrowardoyo Member Posts: 3445 From: Toms River, NJ Registered: Aug 2000
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posted 04-08-2016 08:47 PM
When I was in high school, PCs were just becoming mainstream — and even then not everyone had one (way of transmission on internet, e.g., dial up) and cost to do so. Now those in high school can run circles around me with what they can do, and I work in social media.When the current, older, generation passes, there will have existed a generation familiar and comfortable with technology. Only then will digital and electronic devices become entrenched. |
Wehaveliftoff Member Posts: 2343 From: Registered: Aug 2001
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posted 04-14-2016 08:30 PM
All Apollo and ISS astronauts will have passed by then, so it wouldn't matter to me. Physical photos will always be around for those future "travelers." |