I see quite a few people on @bookstodon extolling the virtues of the Kindle & other e-reading technologies... but as (still) an exclusively physical reader, I'm just going to say as a technology the book still offers:
* random access;
* energy efficiency;
* robust & damage resistance;
* no backwards compatibility issues;
* fully transferable;
* fully compatible with reading privacy;
* presents few waste issues...
But hey its old technology, right?
@ChrisMayLA6 @bookstodon print books work great, for those who can see well.
But with analog books:
- you can’t change the font size to larger (necessity for many for #a11y
- you need light to see the print
- you don’t usually have your hands free, and your eyes certainly aren’t free to roam or rest.
I love #braille. But small selection, need clean hands, hands aren’t free.
So audiobooks and ebooks are great. I can use my phone to read any ebook out loud to me, hands and eyefree
@Unuhi @bookstodon @ChrisMayLA6 I work with a pc all day, not input but writing calcs/code, audio is a relief as I find my eyes blurring after a day on my laptop. I love to hear the narrator voices, esp when an author reads their own books. Currently listening to Simon Sebag Montefiore's The World, the narrators are just incredible.
@PiperCasp @bookstodon @ChrisMayLA6 also you can do anything while listening to an audiobook. Clean, cook, knit, walk, exercise, garden, commute, even drive…
@Unuhi @PiperCasp @bookstodon Hmm... yes (indeed I have listened to audiobooks while driving), but for me (and I stress for me) I like the focus required by reading the book without distraction (which I accept can be also achieved on an e-reader)
@ChrisMayLA6 @PiperCasp @bookstodon i get the concentration for focusing on the book by controlling the speed (has to be fast or i get lost in my thoughts), tone, and trying to control the environment. walking outdoors? nonfiction. fiction? has to be somewhere where i don’t need to actively to try to listen what happens around
@ChrisMayLA6 @Unuhi @PiperCasp @bookstodon Also, integral to focus, is the pace. I have never finished an audio book. I get annoyed with having to keep pace with someone else. I love stopping and looking away when I am moved, taking it in, rereading for the beauty of the language and what it evokes for me. I also get tired of the voice!
@YourSecondDraft @ChrisMayLA6 @PiperCasp @bookstodon that’s why audiobooks have speed control. I usually go around 2 to 2.5x speed in English, different speed in different languages, for different readers and different topics. Nonfiction study materials = fast so I can absorb them. Fiction can be tiny bit slower. Languages I’m not as fluent yet in also a bit slower. Sometimes I speed or slow during the book too.
@ChrisMayLA6 @Unuhi @PiperCasp @bookstodon It's a gift to have the option. My eyes have gotten weaker as I've aged. #Audiobooks have been a great blessing. I went from barely being able to read a chapter a day to finishing entire novels in a couple days, just like when my eyes were younger.
@Unuhi @ChrisMayLA6 @bookstodon @justliz Yep, age is a big part of it🤨
@PiperCasp @Unuhi @ChrisMayLA6 @bookstodon Yes, age, but I also had chemo in my 40s, and my eyes really went downhill then. So it started early and has just gotten worse :( I do better on a backlit screen, but that also dries the eyes out. That's a whole 'nuther issue!