Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Method 6 eBooks & eReaders and Libraries





Last fall, I skipped ahead to read this Method 6 about eReaders. I was so curious about them but never thought I’d want one.


But guess what I’ve had for almost seven months now and really enjoy? Yup, an eReader. Kindle Fire, to be exact. I had promised myself I’d think about one if they came out in color—no black and white for me. When Barnes & Noble and Amazon both as well as Wi-Fi compatible models, I wanted to see them in person. Keep in mind I don’t have a smart phone or other fancy mobile device…more of a simple pay-as-you-go cellular phone. So, these little devices were wonders to me.


But now I’m much more comfortable reading or sending send e-mails, updating or commenting on Facebook, surfing other art blogs, conducting Google Searches, playing card games, and even—gasp!—buying and reading books on my Kindle Fire.


But, it sounds like eReaders aren’t quite so fun for libraries. On one of the links, there was a podcast on YouTube called “Libraries are Screwed.” In these techno times, the codex—the book, the monograph—is in an outmoded form. Digital is all the rage. But copywrite and library loan of digital books is cumbersome if not confusing and inconsistent. Most publishers won’t allow digital sharing since they want their piece of eBook sales. DRM (Digital Rights Management), the restriction of "one copy, one user" inhibits wide-spread circulation of a title.

That isn’t to say that there will not be a software breakthrough in the future or some agreement between libraries and eReader distributors across the many and varied device platforms. Project Gutenberg offers thousands of free e-books because the copyright has expired. I searched for Walden by Henry David Thoreau http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/205. The HTML version could be read online but the text was blocky, single spaced, and without paragraph lines.


Searching our local public library, I found they have eBooks powered by OverDrive and good help through their online pages. For my Kindle Fire, I found this site: http://help.overdrive.com/article/0430/How-to-read-eBooks-borrowed-from-the-library-with-Kindle-devices-or-Kindle-reading-apps


Looks like you can download books directly to your Kindle Fire once you download appropriate software. Here is the Amazon link: http://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html/?nodeId=200747550
But many titles were “checked-out” since only one copy is available. Older classics with no restrictions on copy or availability would be quicker to download.


Once today’s problems between eBooks and libraries are solved, more patrons can enjoy the range, accessibility, and downright fun eReaders promise.