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Replying to and
yeah. I'm uncertain about this. But I remember the article on how a lot of silicon valley luminaries won't let their kids near computers/phones, etc...
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Replying to and
there's some interesting research on the different types of brains that develop from reading and from computers. Computer brains of ppl who didn't develop reading brains are bad at narrative and certain types of empathy, as I recall.
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Replying to and
ah, now that's interesting. Hadn't occured to me at all, but makes sense. A non lighted device might be much less dangerous. (Though there's research that shows people get less out of e-books than paper books - I hate that because I really do love my Kindle for convenience.)
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But I'm curious about your ideas. Hope you land on such a project one day. (And Kindle needs to be opened up as a format. It's one of the things I'd do if I had the power. Bookstores should have scan codes next to physical books so they capture their own sales.)
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Replying to and
It's the first-mover advantage in every digital space, though. Steam is just as hard to get rid of, despite being a terrible platform. Once people start to catch on to the fact that digital goods *don't* all have to come with completely one-sided lease agreements, things change.
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Replying to and
there should be a scan code which lets you buy the book in e-book format on every shelf, with the physical retailer getting a cut. There isn't here. Part of the problem is that in N. America at least, Kindle won the fight and doesn't support e*pub.