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img48m.jpgLets’ take a look at one benefit ebooks have that I haven’t seen mentioned elsewhere. Weight!

I have been trying to read Stephen Wolfram’s “A New Kind of Science” for quite a while. I’ve never been able to get through it. Why? The book weighs 5 pounds 7 ounces and is 2 1/2 inches thick. There is simply no way that you can comfortably hold a book like this – it’s just too thick and heavy. Wouldn’t an ebook version be wonderful! I wonder how may copies of this book go unread simply because of its size and weight?

Let’s look at some other unwieldy books.

Peter Jennings “The Century” – 5 pounds 13 ounces
Neal Stephenson “The Confusion” – 3 pounds 1 ounce
Neal Stephenson “Quicksilver” – 3 pounds 5 ounces
Will Durant “Our Oriental Heritage” – 3 pounds 12 ounces
Peter F. Hamilton “The Naked God” – 3 pounds

It is an unpleasant experience to read books like these. I wonder how many handicapped people have been denied the pleasure of reading Neal Stephenson’s books simply because they can’t hold them.

I don’t believe in DRMed ebooks, but I have acutally spent the $$ to buy all of Stephenson’s books in ebook format, simply because they are so much easier to read without having to deal with all that weight. I did the same with Hamilton’s Neutronium Alchemist series.

Ebooks are about more than just portability, they are about ergonomics as well.

 
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