I offer my own thoughts about the eReader I want and am earnestly
hoping to see developed.
I will preface my remarks by saying that I own a first generation
Kindle. It was given to me by a friend who quickly purchased
the second generation. The
Kindle is a very good device for pure reading. It is possible
to forget you are using a device rather than reading a book. If
you are a purely recreational reader, this device is all you
need. It will especially shine for the purposes of travel. You
will have all the books you want and none of the strain on your
carry-on bag.
For me, unfortunately, this is not enough.
I need the following features added to my electronic reader:
- An option to view a books pages just as they are in the
actual book. As an academic and commentator, I need to be able to
demonstrate exactly where I got a fact or idea. That means I need
to be able to refer to a page number, not some electronic
location. This problem could be conquered either by making books
available as pdfs with a screen large enough to comfortably
display them or the software could insert pagination throughout
the text the same way Lexis-Nexis does. Either would work.
- The ability to mark and highlight the text. The Kindle lets
me highlight portions of a text and even to view them as a group.
However, I cannot easily track the page number from which the
highlights came. And I cannot do anything other than
highlighting. I need to be able to write in margins, bracket,
underline, etc. Call it marginalia. I need to be able to do that.
It would be even better if I could then access all the markings I
did and have ready access to the page numbers from which they
came. A good stylus would be necessary. I can’t do it all with
fingerpainting.
- I’m getting greedy now. But how great would it be if I could
choose portions of a text to email to a friend or to post to a
blog?
- A notepad that could be used like evernote or microsoft note
where I could write outlines or other notes in parallel to the
books and articles I am reading.
Here are the features I don’t need:
- Wi-fi is a plus, but not essential. I could prepare all my
tasks and then connect to a computer to do the things that
require a connection.
- I do not need color e-ink. The black and gray works pretty
well. If color e-ink costs me any features from above, then I
don’t want it. And really, I’d rather just have black and white
rather than black and gray. Color is not necessarily a big add
for people who work with documents.
I very much hope some of the manufacturers and designers will
read this post and consider coming up with a version that can do
these things. There is a big market among academics, graduate
students, college students, and authors for the device that works
in this way. For me, the iPad goes far astray of what I’m
seeking.
Kindle is closer, but not close enough.