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In the fallout of the Sony Reader release, considerable single-purpose/general-purpose discussion has occurred (I’ve generated my share). Some people clearly prefer devices intended just for reading.

Here’s a typical comment (from a Reuters newsblog):

[A] single-purpose device usually does what it’s designed for better than multi-purpose devices can at the same job. Just like it’s easier to eat your steaks with a steak knife than a Swiss Army knife.

But is a single-purpose e-reader like Sony’s really better at reading books?

You can’t use it to read children’s books with color images. You can’t look at photographic books. You can’t read books that include Flash animations (as you can, say, on the Nokia 770). Without WiFi or Bluetooth or somesuch, you can’t link to sources or references on the web, which would seem to be a critical aspect of any book written for and in the electronic age. (Or of any reference text, or technical or scientific journal, etc.)

The “single purpose” that the Sony Reader is designed for is to read black-and-white texts that might contain crude black-and-white images. Yet virtually every K-12 textbook includes color images.

Don’t we want to include children in the e-text revolution? (OK, it’s slow enough that maybe “evolution” is a more appropriate term.) The price of color printing has fallen precipitously in the last 25 years, so that magazines and newspapers without color are the small minority, and a multitude of books are lavishly illustrated with color photos. And textbooks include color on every page, not just sporadic clumps here and there.

I think that a great single-purpose e-reader should be able to be used in schools without ravaging textbooks’ effectiveness. It shouldn’t strip us of the capacity to link to other information. And it shouldn’t treat illustrations and photographs as appendages to the text but as full-fledged equals in communication.

Hooray for the Sony Reader! Just don’t tell me its strength — or any of the other e-Ink e-readers coming — derives from being limited in so many ways.

 
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