As the year lazily plots it course, the reappearance of another birthday on the horizon inspired a period of quiet introspection; stock was taken of last year’s events and what I had learnt, and there was much contemplation of what the new year may bring. With this reflective mindset and the annual ‘sloughing off of the old self’ fast approaching, off I trotted to Digitise or Die: What is the Future of the Book?, a discussion between Margaret Atwood, Andrew O’Hagan, Erica Wagner, the literary editor at the Times and Stephen Page, chief executive of Faber & Faber at Southbank on a topic close to my heart.
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Pages
Judging an e-Book by its cover
Here in the UK, there has only been the faintest ripple of interest in Kindle, the wireless reading device which, endorsed by Oprah Winfrey, is making a big splash across the Pond. Effectively an iPod for books, Kindle allows you to download books via Amazon and access them much like the iPod access music via iTunes. Kindle, with its smooth white rectangular shape, even channels the spirit of Apple’s creation. The Kindle application can also be added to your iPhone so that your iPhone effectively becomes an e-reader.
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