'(·)@allgebrah·Nov 10, 2016library in the VR age: empty, a few facehuggers dangle from the ceiling, patterned sisal carpet so that your feet can tell your position1112
'(·)@allgebrah·Nov 10, 2016Replying to @allgebrahit's a bit sad, but displaying books on shelves when you could just keep them on hard drives feels hollow and fake now, and I love books2210
∰ Jesse@holocronweaver·Nov 10, 2016Replying to @allgebrahAt least for science, math, & eng textbooks, there are no e-readers or ebook formats that do a good job. Still need paper copies.22
'(·)@allgebrah·Nov 10, 2016Replying to @holocronweaverI've seen a DIN A4-size ereader do a really good job at containing annotations to math lecture notes11
'(·)@allgebrah·Nov 10, 2016Replying to @allgebrah and @holocronweaverno, I don't remember the brand, but the friend who used it did so all the time1
∰ Jesse@holocronweaver·Nov 10, 2016Replying to @allgebrahI would pay good money for a device that makes research papers easy on the eyes.1
'(·)@allgebrahReplying to @holocronweaverhm I'll ask, I really have no idea what device it was though, only remember that it was large and comparatively thin12:30 AM · Nov 10, 2016·Twitter Web Client
'(·)@allgebrah·Nov 10, 2016Replying to @allgebrah and @holocronweaverthere seem to exist: Onyx Boox Max, Icarus A4, Sony DPT-S1 (all of them look expensive)11
∰ Jesse@holocronweaver·Nov 10, 2016Replying to @allgebrahThanks. I have used the Sony DPT-S1 - worked well for some docs, but generally had problems with math in PDFs. Had to squint.1