The Sword and Laser discussion
Electronic VS Print: Which is a "deaper" experience?
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(I think this might even tie in with Tom's story of reading Altered carbon, the pretty good for a trashy airport novel novel and reading Altered Carbon, the award winning hardboiled scifi mystery. If that simple change in context gave tom such a radically different novel, then all the extreme changes from one format to another should have some kind of effect)

I think you can edit topics, same as the posts, if it bothers you too much :)

So on balance that seems like a yes, the Kindle is leading me personally to read more deeply.

If I'm using the Kindle app on my tablet or smartphone, though, the various notifications, messages and other distractions are constantly interrupting my reading experience. Not to mention the ever-present temptation to just flip to a game or something anyway.
I think I'm leaning towards feeling that I read more deeply on paper.

I've actually never seriously considered highlighting. As for the dictionary, usually if I want to look something up the dictionary won't have it so I'd have to Google it; occasionally I do, just as I would with a dead tree edition.
I'm not tempted to change this.

No there's not. At least not to me. Perhaps my reaction is borne out of the fact that I see too many people talking about things like this as if they had no choice - that ebooks force them to read differently - and I am severely allergic to arguments where people abdicate their responsibility for a 'devil made me do it' stance.
I read almost exclusively on my iPad these days after reading thousands of books on paper. I can get just as immersed in ebook form as in paper form, it's all about my attitude.
In fact, one of the things I like about ebooks is the ability to look things up. If you read Kadrey's Sandman Slim series, the names of his characters almost all have grounding in mythology and knowing the mythological meaning of the name can add a dimension to the books. On paper I'd never have bothered to look many of them up but on my iPad it's a quick highlight and lookup. On the other hand, if I don't want to mess with that... I don't.

Stephen King might vote audio.
http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,15514...


e-readers lack personality, lack tactile interaction, sensory interaction. It doesn't smell or feel or sound or even look like a book. I don't write in books, ever, so that isn't really a factor for me. I'm not a highlighter, I rarely if ever have to look up anything.
For the "deeper" experience, it has to be a hardback book for me.


re looking at a book on a phone that's too small to show you things like the pictures. Take that same example... make the pictures color. Mak..."
Too small and I can't seem to resize the pictures. I'll just have to try it on the iPad one of these days. If I can pry MY iPad away from the kids.

Sometimes, the graphics are also posted online; Brandon Sanderson has, I'm pretty sure, the Way of Kings graphics on his website. Which is an extra step, but still, it's available at least...

Hah. They all think they need phones already. The youngest is seven. Who's he going to call! No one. Phones are for games and videos, don't ya know, dad!

A kindle is easier to carry around than many books, especially hardcovers, I can carry many books at once, and I can look up words without going to the dictionary or computer.
With a real book I can flip back and forth easier, especially if there are maps or such involved, more easily see when the next chapter break is, and there seems to be fewer misprinted words than I see with e-books.

Anyway, on the utility side, I like electronic better. Highlighting, taking notes, and looking up unknown words are easier. I can take my whole Kindle library with me wherever I go (and that's great if you like to have some reading options when you're, let's say, stuck on traffic). And e-books can also get really, really cheap on sales (got The Way of Kings last year for $3, not to mention the option of free books).


I disagree. There are many different sensory experiences attached to reading a physical book. You place less importance on that one, while I do not.

I always buy hard cover editions for my favorite author when they release a new book but for authors I've never heard I normally go with ebook copy that way it doesn't take up any valuable space on my bookshelf.
Also the way we are going libraries are going to look like the one from futurma.


See, I don't think we really disagree. Right there you say that your reading experience is very different on the iPad than it is in print. Obviously the iPad isn't forcing to change your reading style (and the print book isn't preventing you from looking things up) but because of the way it's set up your experiences are different. The devil didn't make you do it, but he made it so easy that you rarely would choose otherwise.
And I'd argue that what you describe of your experience reading Sandman Slim, it's much deeper than what your experience would have been in print, you gain a greater understanding of the text without ever harming your sense of immersion (and that's why I don't know which of my experiences is deeper; I don't have that same capacity for immersion).
Catfish wrote: It's a pet peeve when people talk about the smell of books. You're using the wrong organ!
But that's the best thing about physical books, they aren't just images, they are really interesting concrete objects. I love the smell books, I love the feel, I love the weight, etc. Things like binding, cut/ normal pages, age, etc, are all just things that add character to this very personal object.

No, no, we disagree VIOLENTL... oh wait.
I guess what I'm pushing back on is the idea that ebooks are inherently less immersive as a medium for most or all people. I'm sure that's true for some... but it's not a universal. Ebooks are different in some ways... but that does not translate to less immersive or even better or worse for all. I'e stayed up until 4am with many ebooks.... just as I've down with paper ones. Hell, I read through the entire Dresden Files series in 5 weeks on my iPad. Talk about immersion...
As far as the Sandman Slim books, I like that I can look things up but I don't let it interrupt immersion. I often look things up on the second read through or early on for a character where the name strikes me as somehow crucial, but in many books I don't do this at all. I do it with Kadrey's since I've discovered that he names his characters intelligently and not just randomly.
I find little or no difference between e-ink and paper. I love being able to load 10 books and having them available as it suits my whim.
I do experience a difference between e-ink and backlit devices. The latter I find more stressful on my eyes, so I tend to skim more. It is less likely I'll get lost in the text. I do have f.lux on my computer and something similar on my phone, to reduce eye-strain a bit.
I don't think I'd like reading long texts on my phone, just too small for my taste. I've heard there is a phone overseas that has an e-ink screen on the back, much better battery life. I might give that a try if it ever makes it over here. Still the size factor whould still be there. e-Readers are about the size of a paperback, a phone's much smaller.
I do experience a difference between e-ink and backlit devices. The latter I find more stressful on my eyes, so I tend to skim more. It is less likely I'll get lost in the text. I do have f.lux on my computer and something similar on my phone, to reduce eye-strain a bit.
I don't think I'd like reading long texts on my phone, just too small for my taste. I've heard there is a phone overseas that has an e-ink screen on the back, much better battery life. I might give that a try if it ever makes it over here. Still the size factor whould still be there. e-Readers are about the size of a paperback, a phone's much smaller.


I have the same problem with backlit devices. The protective screen on E-ink devices sometimes picks up some glare (similar to glossy magazines), but is still much better than an LCD and only a little worse than paper. E-readers are great when I cannot carry enough books when traveling.
David wrote: "I've heard there is a phone overseas that has an e-ink screen on the back...
That would be the YotaPhone. http://yotaphone.com/en/ I have my eye on it too.
Catfish wrote: It's a pet peeve when people talk about the smell of books. You're using the wrong organ!
Rob wrote: "But that's the best thing about physical books, they aren't just images, they are really interesting concrete objects. I love the smell books, I love the feel, I love the weight, etc. Things like binding, cut/ normal pages, age, etc, are all just things that add character to this very personal object.
Exactly! The package is part of the reading experience. Not all of us appreciate the sterile technology experience that renders every book identical.
The real problem with devices is getting them turn pages accurately. Sometimes, they don't register the command. Other times, they read it too wrong and turn too many pages.

I also just downloaded an interesting ereader for iOS called Marvin which has several themes including some that mimic the lessened contrast.
bottom line here is to TURN DOWN BRIGHTNESS. I'll get eyestrain fairly quickly if I use the normal brightness settings I use for looking at apps when I read. If I turn the brightness down a lot it's much better. This is even more important on Samsung devices that use a highly saturated screen.

Where I think the Paperwhite shines though compared to lcd is if reading in full sunlight. Zero glare. I haven't compared a paper book reading in full sunlight though.
I agree on turning the brightness way down. I use the sepia tone at about half brightness on my iPad.
I find I get eye strain only with paper books/magazines/newspapers and it all has to do with not being able to enlarge the font size (if needed).
Getting to choose font type and size is a huge plus for eReaders for older readers.
I find I get eye strain only with paper books/magazines/newspapers and it all has to do with not being able to enlarge the font size (if needed).
Getting to choose font type and size is a huge plus for eReaders for older readers.

http://marvinapp.com

John wrote: "I love my kindle fire. Many, many good e-texts available from Gutenberg Press...."
Gutenberg Press and eBooks@Adelaide are a great source for books. They are books I might not want to bother my local library with getting through interlibrary loan. But being able to quickly download a book, well, lets say my "to read" list is long.
Gutenberg Press and eBooks@Adelaide are a great source for books. They are books I might not want to bother my local library with getting through interlibrary loan. But being able to quickly download a book, well, lets say my "to read" list is long.

My kindle paperwhite goes everywhere with me and keeps me from ever having to lug 2 hardcovers with me on the subway again.
When I'm reading an ebook, my brain is firing on a lot of levels that it wouldn't be ordinarily. It's easy for me to be constantly highlighting this and that, taking notes, flipping back to earlier highlighted passages for comparison, and searching through the book for mentions of _____ character or concept. Things even get color coded on my kindle app, so I can scroll through and not just see all my notes, but all my notes on _____ theme and instantly compare the most relevant passages. My academic-brain is very active. And I normally read much more quickly than normal!
BUT all of this means I'm less immersed. If I'm going "AHA another passage on Lady Trent's missionary friends, better highlight this and then go back and see if at their last appearance they said anything interesting...oooh that's right when they last showed up they were being all White Imperialisty," then I'm somewhat removed from the novel. When I'm reading in print, unless I'm rereading, nothing like this crosses my mind. I don't stop and go "oh, what a beautiful passage of prose, better note this for later" or "ooh, this paragraph needs to be blue so I can quote it in the resleeving discussion." I'm not consciously thinking anything at all other than "DANG this is a good/bad/mediocre book!" And until I hit a chapter break, nothing really exists except the novel's world.
I don't really know which is better, or which is a "deeper" way of reading. I get two different but two really great experiences out of both. Does anyone have such discordant experiences? If they do differ, which do you prefer?
EDIT: Dang it did I put a typo not only in the subject but in quotes, thus obviously pointing out the typo to everyone? I did? Double dang.