Something to think about, from the Rural Libraries list.

Laurie

Laurie Mahaffey, Deputy Director

Central Texas Library System, Inc.

1005 West 41st Street

Austin, Texas 78756

www.ctls.net

[email protected]

512-583-0704 x18

800-262-4431 x18

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Don Reynolds
Sent: Thursday, April 01, 2010 2:08 PM
To: ARSL Listserv; TLA; TN-Libraries
Subject: [ARSL-L] iPad Change of Life

 

Dear Friends and Gentle People - 

Well, as British novelist and playwright Arnold Bennett has written,

"Any change, even a change for the better, 

is always accompanied by drawbacks and discomforts."

 

This week's Newsweek and Time magazines both have lengthy articles about
the next significant cultural change - Apple's new iPad.

It appears that this little device just might be the next tail that will
soon be wagging the dog and changing our lives as we now know them: the
color and page turning function for books will greatly certainly
challenge the Kindle and Sony reader experience.

 

For a most thoughtful take on the iPad, I have reprinted below Anna
Quindlen's Newsweek article:  "Turning the Page - The future of reading
is backlit and bright." 

 

And here's a little extra, just to take you back to the good ole book
reading days of your youth  -  what happens to a heroine turning 80:

To Nancy Drew on Her 80th Birthday: You're a Nintendo Game?! 

http://blog.newsweek.com/blogs/techtonicshifts/archive/2011/04/01/to-nan
cy-drew-on-her-80th-birthday-you-re-a-nintendo-game.aspx

 

Check out these articles and be prepared.  (Remember, "If you don't
create change, change will create you").

Enjoy  -  Don

 

________________________________

Newsweek, April 5th

 

Think Really Different - The iPad will change the way you use computers,
read books, and watch TV-as long as you're willing to do it the Steve
Jobs way.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/235565

 

Turning the Page - The future of reading is backlit and bright.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/235551

 

Here Is Why The iPad Won't Save The Magazine Industry

http://www.newsweek.com//frameset.aspx/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.tbiresearch
.com%2Fhere-is-why-the-ipad-wont-save-the-magazine-industry-2010-3
<http://www.newsweek.com/frameset.aspx/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.tbiresearch
.com%2Fhere-is-why-the-ipad-wont-save-the-magazine-industry-2010-3> 

<http://blog.newsweek.com/blogs/techtonicshifts/archive/2011/04/01/to-na
ncy-drew-on-her-80th-birthday-you-re-a-nintendo-game.aspx>  

________________________________

<http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1976932,00.html> 

Time Magazine April 12th

 

Do We Need the iPad?

http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1976932,00.html

<http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1976935,00.html>  

The iPad Launch: Can Steve Jobs Do It Again?

http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1976935,00.html

 

________________________________

 

 

Turning the Page - The future of reading is backlit and bright. 

By Anna Quindlen | NEWSWEEK  From the magazine issue dated Apr 5, 2010

The stages of a writer's professional life are marked not by a name on
an office door, but by a name in ink. There was the morning when my
father came home carrying a stack of Sunday papers because my byline was
on page one, and the evening that I persuaded a security guard to hand
over an early edition, still warm from the presses, with my first
column. But there's nothing to compare to the day when someone-in my
case, the FedEx guy-hands over a hardcover book with your name on the
cover. And with apologies to all the techies out there, I'm just not
sure the moment would have had the same grandeur had my work been
downloaded instead into an e-reader.

The book is dead, I keep hearing as I sit writing yet another in a room
lined with them. Technology has killed it. The libraries of the world
are doomed to become museums, storage facilities for a form as
antediluvian as cave paintings. Americans, however, tend to bring an
either-or mentality to most things, from politics to prose. The
invention of television led to predictions about the demise of radio.
The making of movies was to be the death knell of live theater; recorded
music, the end of concerts. All these forms still exist-sometimes
overshadowed by their siblings, but not smothered by them. And despite
the direst predictions, reading continues to be part of the life of the
mind, even as computers replace pencils, and books fly into handhelds as
well as onto store shelves. Anton Chekhov, meet Steve Jobs.

There's no question that reading off-paper, as I think of it, will
increase in the years to come. The nurse-midwives of literacy, public
librarians, are already loaning e-readers; a library that got 10 as
gifts reported that within a half hour they had all been checked out.
And there's no question that once again we will be treated to
lamentations suggesting that true literacy has become a lost art. The
difference this time is that we will confront elitism from both sides.
Not only do literary purists now complain of the evanescent nature of
letters onscreen, the tech aficionados have become equally disdainful of
the old form. "This book stinks," read an online review of the
bestseller Game Change before the release of the digital version. "The
thing reeks of paper and ink."

Perhaps those of us who merely want to hunker down and be transported
should look past both sides to concern ourselves with function instead
of form. I am cheered by the Gallup poll that asks a simple question: do
you happen to be reading any books or novels at present? In 1952 a mere
18 percent of respondents said yes. The last time the survey was done,
in 2005, that number was 47 percent. So much for the good old days.

But not so fast: the National Endowment for the Arts released a report
in 2007 that said reading fiction was declining sharply, especially
among younger people. Market research done for booksellers has found
that the number of so-called avid readers, those who buy more than 10
books a year, skews older and overwhelmingly female. One of the most
surprising studies indicates that the biggest users of e-readers are not
the YouTube young but affluent middle-aged men. (Some analysts suggest
that this may be about adaptable font size; oh, our failing eyes!) The
baby boomers are saving publishing; after them, the deluge?

The most provocative account of the effect of technology on literacy is
now 16 years old, and while it remains a good read-in ink on paper but
not, alas, digitally-the passage of time shows that its dark view of the
future is overstated. Sven Birkerts's The Gutenberg Elegies
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0865479577/?tag=nwswk-20>
notes, correctly, that "our entire collective subjective history-the
soul of our societal body-is encoded in print." But the author rejects
the notion that words can appear on a computer screen in a satisfactory
fashion: "The assumptions that underlie their significance are entirely
different depending on whether we are staring at a book or a
circuit-generated text," he says.

Is that true? Is Jane Austen somehow less perceptive or entertaining
when the words "It is a truth universally acknowledged" appear onscreen?
It's disconcerting to read that many of the bestselling novels in Japan
in recent years have been cell-phone books. But it's also cheering to
hear from e-book owners who say they find themselves reading more
because the books come to them rather than the other way around. I
remember an impassioned eulogy for the typewriter delivered years ago by
one of my newspaper colleagues: how, he asked, could we write on a
keyboard that made no sound? Just fine, it turned out.

There is and has always been more than a whiff of snobbery about
lamentations that reading is doomed to extinction. That's because
they're really judgments on human nature. If you've convinced yourself
that America is a deeply anti-intellectual country, it must follow that
we don't read, or we read the wrong things, or we read them in the wrong
fashion. And now we have gleeful e-elitism as well, the notion that the
conventional product, printed and bound, is a hopeless dinosaur. Tech
snobbery is every bit as silly as the literary variety. Both ignore the
tremendous power of book love. As Kafka once said, "A book must be the
ax for the frozen sea within us."

Reading is not simply an intellectual pursuit but an emotional and
spiritual one. It lights the candle in the hurricane lamp of self;
that's why it survives. There are book clubs and book Web sites and
books on tape and books online. There are still millions of people who
like the paper version, at least for now. And if that changes-well, what
is a book, really? Is it its body, or its soul? Would Dickens have
recognized a paperback of A Christmas Carol
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1449910416/?tag=nwswk-20> , or,
for that matter, a Braille version? Even on a cell-phone screen, Tiny
Tim can God-bless us, every one.

Quindlen's sixth novel, Every Last One
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1400065747/?tag=nwswk-20> , will
be released on April 13 in hardcover
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1400065747/?tag=nwswk-20> , 
digital
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0036S4BNK/?tag=nwswk-20> , and 
audio editions
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1442334002/?tag=nwswk-20> . 

________________________________

________________________________

Donald B. Reynolds, Jr.
Director, Nolichucky Regional Library
315 McCrary Drive
Morristown, Tennessee 37814
423.586.6251
423.586.7741 (fax)
[email protected] 

Further Information and Services:

http://noliwiki.pbwiki.com/ 

http://state.tn.us/tsla/regional/NRL/index.htm

 

Founding Director / Past President 

Association for Rural & Small Libraries

http://www.arsl.info <http://www.arsl.info/>   

http://arsl.pbwiki.com/ 

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