Hi Henry, Thank you for that thoughtful well written article. Of course you 
 are correct about this serious situation Regards and thanks evelyn Pearl 
 
 
In a message dated 1/25/2013 1:20:56 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[email protected] writes:

>  Henry is a typical luddite and is a right (with exception of "from  
real")
> only in saying that "the transition from real books to digital  books is
> not an equivalent transition to the transition from scroll to  codex". The
> transition to digital editions brings humanity a much  greater increase in
> use value of books, than all previous revolutions  in this area. combined.
> 
> Librarians who are too lazy to change  their minds actually harm their
> patrons and institutions they work  for.
>
> Alex
Dear Alex, 
I reject your characterization of myself as a Luddite, typical or  
otherwise. I have been selling books via the internet longer than any other  
merchant on this list. I have had an active presence on the internet since  
1995.  
I  have been actively following the issue of digital books since 1989. At 
that  time I began a discussion with the CEO of a small computer technology 
company  on the issue and developed a list of qualities in a digital reader 
that I felt  were necessary before anyone other than tech geeks would be 
interested in  using the devices. What I learned over the next fifteen years or 
so was that  not only was the device the issue but also the business model 
which applied to  the books being sold to be read on those devices. An 
additional issue to be  considered is whether digital books are better than 
print 
books. This is an  issue usually avoided by those promoting digital books. 
The standard that I initially imagined was the minimum standard for an  
acceptable e-reader was first achieved by the Nook Color and later by the  
Ipad. There are now many devices that meet that standard. However, there are  
additional possibilities for the e-reader that are not yet supported either  
technologically or legally. In my 2009 AJL paper 
(_http://www.jewishlibraries.org/main/Resources/Podcast/tabid/89/ID/1133/Jewish-Libraries-Jewish-Book-Sto
res-Friends-or-Strangers.aspx_ 
(http://www.jewishlibraries.org/main/Resources/Podcast/tabid/89/ID/1133/Jewish-Libraries-Jewish-Book-Stores-Friends-or-St
rangers.aspx)   or better the re-written version in AJL News) I claimed 
that access to  e-reading capabilities would be nearly ubiquitous by 2015. THE 
MAIN OPEN  ISSUES REMAINING ARE THOSE TO DO WITH THE BUSINESS MODELS (AND 
STANDARDS). 
Libraries are not treated equally to retail purchasers of e-books.  
Companies that sell access rather  than ownership have found a model that is 
wonderfully profitable for  themselves and horribly parasitical towards their 
customers. Purchasers of  e-books from Amazon are always subject to complete 
loss of access to the  materials they have purchased at the arbitrary 
discretion of Amazon. Many  scientific journals are only available through the 
rental 
model and the costs  are ferociously high. E-books are not available with 
complete device  interoperability because Amazon prefers to obstruct a 
standard format for  their own commercial benefit. Amazon’s pricing model as 
defended by the courts  threaten the future of independent publishers by taking 
away from the  publishers the right to set prices so that their operations 
can be profitable.  Essentially, the middle-men have crippled the potential 
for e-books. Some  smaller e-book venders have a fairer model and I would say 
Varda Books is one  of them.  
Making e-books accessible is a much more complicated project than  making 
printed books accessible. I am not sure where the financial tipping  point is 
between the two, but I am pretty sure that librarians are having just  as 
much trouble locating that tipping point and acting on the correct side of  
it.. There is research on this subject already, but much more is warranted.   
It has already been shown that reading retention from paper books is  
superior to reading retention from e-readers and other screens. This may  
change 
over time due to evolution, but not in the lifetime of any of the  living.  
In a Pew Center study on e-reading  
(http://libraries.pewinternet.org/2012/04/04/the-rise-of-e-reading/) it was  
found that the majority of e-reader 
owners use their devices to read  periodicals and newspapers rather than 
books. (At least one publisher of  Romance Novels has entirely switched to 
e-books.) What we can learn from that  is that the preference of the majority 
of 
e-readers is for a device that will  allow them to dispense with ownership of 
reading materials that they consider  disposable or expect to complete in a 
very short time period. Serious reading  is getting a much slower uptake 
onto e-readers.  
E-reading devices are slowly being made able to take advantage of the  
previous 1500 years of experience in book design. However, many types of books  
are still poorly served by e-readers. Poetry, Art Books, Children’s Books 
and  in general all well-illustrated books lag significantly by comparison 
with the  printed iterations. The world of books outside the English language 
remains  largely outside of the e-reader purview.  
The simple truth is this: if you put a paper book in a readers hand  they 
are good to go. This will always be true. As such e-books will always be  at 
a handicap.  This is quite  different than the transition from CDs to MP3s 
(Video to Dvd, etc.). That was   a device transition. A device was required 
in the first state and a device was  required in the second state. The issue 
here is whether or not we should make  reading depend on access to a device 
or not or maintaining an open situation  (multiple types of access). I 
strongly support maintaining an open situation.  (This is by definition not a 
Luddite position.) 
As I stated in my previous post, Bookless Libraries is a radical idea.  As 
in all fields there may be some lazy librarians, but I don’t know any of  
them. It is clear to me that in the environment of a bookless library the  
institution administrators will view librarians as an unneeded luxury. Wrong  
as they would be I think that librarians who actively work towards that goal  
may actively be working themselves out of jobs. The best in librarianship  
today is found where libraries are trying to do more, offer more in more  
different ways, and with budgets that rarely offer the support required for  
the task. Today’s librarians can be neither lazy in thought or deed. They are 
 ill-served by the Bookless Library radicalism. They do their best work 
when  they are able to do their work on the basis of the needs of their 
patrons,  rather than the needs of their venders or imperious technologists and 
 
futurists. 
I strongly believe that libraries need  to organize and resist the 
rapacious exploitation that they are suffering from  at the hands of scientific 
publishers, Amazon, and all those who license use  of books rather than sell 
them. Libraries should be demanding the adoption of  an open standard for 
e-textuality. Information technology should be  subordinated to librarianship 
rather than the reverse. The continued  prevalence of paper books in the 
library environment should be assumed. Varda  Books is now frequently bundling 
the 
purchased of their e-books with  print-on-demand paper copies of the same 
titles. Despite your statements  above, on a practical basis, we seem to 
differ less than might have been  thought.Best Regards,
Henry Hollander

Henry Hollander.  Bookseller
843 Twenty-Fourth Avenue
San Francisco, CA  94121
415-831-3228  tel
[email protected]
http://www.hollanderbooks.com

ALL  KINDS OF JEWISH BOOKS

__
Messages and opinions expressed on Hasafran  are those of the individual 
author
and are not necessarily endorsed by the  Association of Jewish Libraries  
(AJL)
==================================
Submissions for Ha-Safran, send  to:
[email protected]
To join Ha-Safran, update or  change your subscription, etc. - click here:  
https://lists.service.ohio-state.edu/mailman/listinfo/hasafran
Questions,  problems, complaints, compliments send to: [email protected]
Ha-Safran  Archives:
Current:
http://www.mail-archive.com/hasafran%40lists.service.ohio-state.edu/maillist
.html
Earlier  Listserver:
http://www.mail-archive.com/hasafran%40lists.acs.ohio-state.edu/maillist.htm
l
AJL  HomePage http://www.JewishLibraries.org
--
Hasafran mailing  list
[email protected]
https://lists.service.ohio-state.edu/mailman/listinfo/hasafran

__
Messages and opinions expressed on Hasafran are those of the individual author
and are not necessarily endorsed by the Association of Jewish Libraries (AJL)
==================================
Submissions for Ha-Safran, send to:
[email protected]
To join Ha-Safran, update or change your subscription, etc. - click here: 
https://lists.service.ohio-state.edu/mailman/listinfo/hasafran
Questions, problems, complaints, compliments send to: [email protected]
Ha-Safran Archives:
Current:
http://www.mail-archive.com/hasafran%40lists.service.ohio-state.edu/maillist.html
Earlier Listserver:
http://www.mail-archive.com/hasafran%40lists.acs.ohio-state.edu/maillist.html
AJL HomePage http://www.JewishLibraries.org
--
Hasafran mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.service.ohio-state.edu/mailman/listinfo/hasafran

Reply via email to