tom at jtjohnson.com sent you a link to the following content:
OLPC and the Kindle http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/12/olpc_and_the_ki.html The sender also included this note: A folo on this morning's discussion of the Kindle and OLPC devices. (Although I still haven't been able to get my OLPC to connect to the I-net.) -tj -- Sent via a FeedFlare link from a FeedBurner feed. http://www.feedburner.com/fb/a/publishers/feedflare |
Thanks for that--a very fair appraisal, I thought, though the
keyboard on the OL is a lot better than on the Kindle. Yeah, for me it's all about reading books in transit--in airports, on planes, on the subway--without lugging the timber. I've downloaded about five books, and one of the best features was using the "search" feature to go through a 500-page book by Anthony Trollope, looking for evidence that an unmarried Victorian couple may or may not have consummated their relationship. It would've been hell to try and find in my paperback version; it was easy to find in the electronic version (yes, they probably did, fyi, but Trollope is so sly he gets it right past you if you're not looking for it). I also keep saying to everyone that I don't expect to use it in my living room, but whaddya know... and it's exactly the right size for reading in bed. P. Once when I asked a chieftain in a certain province [of Peru] if he was a Christian, he said "I am not yet quite one, but I am making a beginning." I asked him what he knew of being Christian, and he said: "I know how to swear to God, and play cards a bit, and I am beginning to steal." Fray Domingo Santo Tomas, 1560 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://redfish.com/pipermail/friam_redfish.com/attachments/20071221/384e25e5/attachment.html |
As we say.... "you can't grep paper" !
Though I expect soon enough that we will have invasive 3D scanners or something which you just chuck a book into and viola! You get back the full text with the appropriate typeface, illustrations and perhaps even a lexical analysis of the text. - Steve On Dec 21, 2007, at 2:00 PM, Pamela McCorduck wrote: > Thanks for that--a very fair appraisal, I thought, though the > keyboard on the OL is a lot better than on the Kindle. Yeah, for me > it's all about reading books in transit--in airports, on planes, on > the subway--without lugging the timber. I've downloaded about five > books, and one of the best features was using the "search" feature > to go through a 500-page book by Anthony Trollope, looking for > evidence that an unmarried Victorian couple may or may not have > consummated their relationship. It would've been hell to try and > find in my paperback version; it was easy to find in the electronic > version (yes, they probably did, fyi, but Trollope is so sly he > gets it right past you if you're not looking for it). I also keep > saying to everyone that I don't expect to use it in my living room, > but whaddya know... and it's exactly the right size for reading in > bed. > > P. > > > > Once when I asked a chieftain in a certain province [of Peru] if he > was a Christian, he said "I am not yet quite one, but I am making a > beginning." I asked him what he knew of being Christian, and he > said: "I know how to swear to God, and play cards a bit, and I am > beginning to steal." > > Fray Domingo Santo Tomas, 1560 > > > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org |
PC Mag's last issue talked about 3D printers. pretty interesting--they
essentially make a model of the object. On Dec 21, 2007, at 7:23 PM, Steve Smith wrote: > As we say.... "you can't grep paper" ! > > Though I expect soon enough that we will have invasive 3D scanners or > something which you just chuck a book into and viola! You get back > the full text with the appropriate typeface, illustrations and perhaps > even a lexical analysis of the text. > > - Steve > On Dec 21, 2007, at 2:00 PM, Pamela McCorduck wrote: > >> Thanks for that--a very fair appraisal, I thought, though the >> keyboard on the OL is a lot better than on the Kindle. Yeah, for me >> it's all about reading books in transit--in airports, on planes, on >> the subway--without lugging the timber. I've downloaded about five >> books, and one of the best features was using the "search" feature >> to go through a 500-page book by Anthony Trollope, looking for >> evidence that an unmarried Victorian couple may or may not have >> consummated their relationship. It would've been hell to try and >> find in my paperback version; it was easy to find in the electronic >> version (yes, they probably did, fyi, but Trollope is so sly he >> gets it right past you if you're not looking for it). I also keep >> saying to everyone that I don't expect to use it in my living room, >> but whaddya know... and it's exactly the right size for reading in >> bed. >> >> P. >> >> >> >> Once when I asked a chieftain in a certain province [of Peru] if he >> was a Christian, he said "I am not yet quite one, but I am making a >> beginning." I asked him what he knew of being Christian, and he >> said: "I know how to swear to God, and play cards a bit, and I am >> beginning to steal." >> >> Fray Domingo Santo Tomas, 1560 >> >> >> >> >> ============================================================ >> FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv >> Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College >> lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College > lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org > |
Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |