LolaRennt: Jay #1 basically hit it on the head. eBooks save space on trips, hell or even just around town. Don't get me wrong, they aren't a replacement for physical books, I plan to continue to spend a good portion of each paycheck at my local Borders. With devices like my iphone though I don't have to lug around a novel with me wherever I go if I find myself with some time to read. I can leave my copy at home safe and sound.
I use the Stanza app on my iPhone and it's great, it remembers where I'm at and takes me right back to it if I need to take a call. Then when I do get home to my real copy I can just pick that up and keep on reading. I'll be going back to Washington D.C. in May, with that I can just load whatever I'm currently reading onto my phone and maybe a few other books as well. That way I won't have to worry about losing my book somewhere or picking one up while I'm back there.
mores Wrote:If they're worried about piracy, they're already too late
A lot of printed books are pirated. Scanned and OCRed and released on torrent sites or the IRC.
This is an unfortunate truth but I really hope it doesn't stop eBook versions from being released. The only other request I would have is be very careful about using DRM on any that are released, all it does is hurt the people who don't know how to find alternate sources.
I'll admit that I'm the type of person who will avoid DRM at all costs. I'd rather pay you for your work so that you can continue doing it but if it comes down to a version that I legally paid for and won't be able to use
because the company hosting the DRM servers might decide to call it quits or a free version that I won't ever have to worry about that issue with guess which way I'll swing.