The battle for the hearts, minds and pockets of book readers continues. e-books may be the big go at the moment, but one reader - in the Heckler column of The Age newspaper - reveals why he will be sticking to good ol' regular books.
"I'll never buy an e-reader. I love paper books too much. Every day I read that yet another cut-price e-reader has squished itself into the booming market. The evidence warns that the age of the e-reader is coming, with its minions, in their millions. I refuse to become a follower.
First of all, e-books are slower to read. A study by Nielsen Norman Group that compared reading speeds for a Kindle 2, an iPad, a PC monitor and good old-fashioned paper found that reading on an electronic tablet was up to 10.7 per cent slower than reading a printed book."
"I'll never buy an e-reader. I love paper books too much. Every day I read that yet another cut-price e-reader has squished itself into the booming market. The evidence warns that the age of the e-reader is coming, with its minions, in their millions. I refuse to become a follower.
First of all, e-books are slower to read. A study by Nielsen Norman Group that compared reading speeds for a Kindle 2, an iPad, a PC monitor and good old-fashioned paper found that reading on an electronic tablet was up to 10.7 per cent slower than reading a printed book."
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