Hey I’m watching Good Omens – Season 1 (4K UHD). Check it out now on Prime Video!
Books
Contemplating mutiny from Amazon to Google
Back in August, I rambled a bit about my thoughts on electronic books. Later on I acquired an Android tablet; about 4 x as much as a Kindle for the make/model tablet I purchased, but a hell of a lot more useful than a kindle or my netbook.
Title | Amazon Kindle Price | Google Play Price | List Price @Amazon | Amazon Availability | Google Availability |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Real-Time Rendering | $58.28 | $69.42 | $89.00 | PC, Mac, iPad | Web, iOS, Android, eReader |
OpenGL SuperBible: Comprehensive Tutorial and Reference | $28.59 | $37.67 | $59.99 | Kindle, iOS, Android, Blackberry, PC, Mac | Web, iOS, Android, eReader |
Essential Mathematics for Games and Interactive Applications, Second Edition: A Programmer’s Guide | N/A | $47.36 | $59.95 | N/A | Web, iOS, Android, eReader |
3D Game Engine Design: A Practical Approach To Real-Time Computer Graphics | N/A | $66.36 | $82.95 | N/A | Web, iOS, Android, eReader |
Linux Kernel Development | $17.69 | $31.19 | $39.99 | PC* | Web, iOS, Android, eReader |
Understanding The Linux Kernel | $29.79 | $37.67 | $59.99 | PC* | Web, iOS, Android, eReader |
I’ve read my first bit of Lovecraft today, in the form of a “The Tomb”, a quaint tale that gives cause to question the narrators sanity or our reality; that or I just think to much! That puts me about 1% through The Complete Works of H.P. Lovecraft according to the Amazon Kindle app on Andera. So far, I think I’m going to like these, and along with the games and various development tools on my tablet (and my jot), should help pass the long flights I have coming up after Christmas.
Hmm, that was about 160 some screens by my arithmetic, which should translate to maybe 50’ish pages in a real hard cover book; going by the standardesque side for a novel anyway. Most are short stories as well, so it sounds like the stories should be a good fit for my current life style. One that sadly, doesn’t seem to find room for that many good novels :-(. I’ve always had an avaricious taste for reading, but the fluctuations of time and money over the last lustrum, have been rather, light. I don’t really have any shelf space left either, so aquiring new (from my perpective) books is best done in electonic form.
Can’t say that I will ever appreciate the feel of a computer as much as a real concreate book in hand, but I will admit: for cost, space and travel reasons. It’s a damn good idea. As much as I like the idea of digital copies though, I do not look forward to a world without “Traditional” books in it. Yeah, so what if I’ll probably belong in a mausoelum by the time I’m legally an old fart. I like sitting with a book in hand!
Ramblings on Electronic Books
Of recent, I’ve been doing a little studying on the issue of ebooks, primarily because I tend to be tighter on shelf space than disk space. For some stuff of interest to me, I must say, the digitial solution is usually cheaper: perhaps up to 40% or less the list price. Although that being said, I usually prefer “Used” books on the cheap to new books at full price, but the nearest decent used bookstore for years has been is Amazon o/.
Two major retailers of books in general exist that are worth my investment: Amazon (Kindle) and B&N (Nookland). Kobo looks intensely interesting but within minutes of checking their website, I do not trust them with my billing information.
Now I may be a major cheapskate but I don’t mind buying what I want, in fact, I prefer it—if it gets me exactly what I want. In the case of the Kindle and Nook stores at least, it is pretty much there. The problem is DRM. You can read it on a PC, a Mac, iOS, Android devices, and their own reader devices.
Well guess what, I prefer a PC but their software doesn’t work on mine. My PC’s run Linux and BSD based operating systems :-).
This creates a bit of a irk for me: why should I give them my money, if they will restrict what I can do overtly? Generally, I would choose the Kindle store as a matter of taste. The problem is each store’s DRM prevents me from using the devices that ***I*** wish to use at my leisure, so it is little better then requiring their hardware. Given the choice of using my cell phone or remoting to a windows or OSX box to read from Linux and BSD, isn’t what I call fair enough versus the cost of a real old fashioned book I can lay in bed and read.
Honestly, I am not against DRM in concept, only how it is typically executed. Because if it is much more complex then email + password + auth token = decode and enjoy content, ala setting up Dropbox on a new PC (to access your content). It is not managing my digital rights, it is removing them. IMHO the only practical form of DRM for books and the like: would be the kind where someone is unable to access the material in _any_ form, unless their DNA matches the DNA of the person licensed to access (read) it, and any violation results in automatic punishment; such as content erasure, imprisionment, etc. Even if locked down expicilitly to the ebook reader’s hardware, and somehow hardware hacking was prevented from being possible—it would still be a failure: because you could just photo copy the screen the same way as pages in a paper book. So in the end, we end up having to pay the price of assholes trying to outfox assholes o/.
The subscription model is better: pay x/cycle for such and such content. That is probably closer to what some DRM-folks like in the music indrustry want anyway, making profit off each playback rather than each distribution of content 8-).
It is very strongly worth noting that in general: I am very against dedicated devices like the Kindle or Nook, when you could spend more and get a more general purpose device like an Android tablet or iPad. I’m not willing to buy one of those for myself until after Ice Cream is mainstream, so I really should just buy a darn Kindle 3. It’s only like $140 with the 3G option, and I am more applicable to buying a Kindle then dealing with trying to get around the DRM issues.
While it’s limited to technical books, I really would consider something like Safari Online Books to be a much better investment but I want more than what it can offer. I’ll likely begin evaluating things more closely in the near future, as well as setting up Safari for a trial. Safari has the best techy publishers in my experience.
Egg on my face
Oh this is a shocker!
I noticed I had one of my quick bookmarks in konqueror that I never finished reading, some thing on command line arguments — a very poor name for a bookmark generally speaking.
So I opened it in another tab and parsed it at my usual rapid pace. Gradually I started lookinf around at other stuff on the site, intrigued by some of the other things I found, even things noted about the design of termcap/terminfo, fetchmail, gcc, etc and decisions involved with the problems the developers had to solve. About a half an hour and almost 3 chapters later and figuring it was probably some (good) book gifted to the WWW by a universities CS department I finally clicked the ‘home’ button and felt like popping myself in the head when I realized what I had been reading a mirror of:
The Art of Unix Programming
I remember I was reading it last year but I never had time to finish it. Hmm, I wonder where I left off? It is a very fine book but unfortunately not one I was able to inhale in my spare time :. I might be a strange person but when I find a good book, it usually makes a transition from eye to brain at a rate of 50-120 pages a day xD, time and energy permitting of course.
It’s a book I’d fully recommend for any one interested in problem solving or engineering’ish thinking.