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Thursday, December 13, 2007

Amazon's Kindle

Jonathan Franzen:
"Yes, in theory, words are words. But literature isn't data. The difference between Shakespeare on a BlackBerry and Shakespeare in the Arden Edition is like the difference between vows taken in a shoe store and vows taken in cathedral."
Via Virginia Postel.

3 comments:

  1. Anonymous10:16 AM

    I wish someone would talk about issues about Kindle:

    - How does it show pictures/images?

    - If you get NYT subscription, then do you lose yesterday's paper (once you finished reading)? That is, can you save an issue or even a story (say, an op-ed essay)?

    - If you use wireless only at times, then how long does the battery last?

    - Any thoughts if Amazon will reduce the cost (like Apple did for iPhone)?

    - How does one send notes (annotated) to computer or a website?

    - How is the web-browser? Can we read NYT for free using this?

    Okay, basic questions, but no one talks about these items

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  2. Anonymous7:28 PM

    It's a stupid comparison. Shakespeare, for his part, would have hated that we only experience his "words" as dead tree pages and not alive on a stage. I'm no fan of the Kindle, but Franzen shouldn't fetish-ize any technology.

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  3. Indeed! If anyone would have appreciated the beauty of vows taken in a shoe store (as opposed to say, a cathedral) it would have been Shakespeare. ;)

    ReplyDelete