Quote:
Originally Posted by gamma
I think Lapham's on an e-reader would really take away from the experience.
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Wow! a fellow explorer....I'm glad to see others like it too. I agree, I like the
finality of having them lined up on a shelf for reference (its not a collection of more than 4 since i've only been subscribing for this year) I think I started subscribing when the quarterly started, so its pretty cool its catching on and others know about it.
2 sides to the thought: one: if I subscribed to the quarterly on an i-pad, its only valuable to me if I can highlight a section and send it via email to someone who would find it interesting - The ability to share information in a real time, useful and efficient way. .
I agree, if its only on a machine to be read alone, it loses its substance. Though maybe he should charge $50 bucks more and make it a hardcover. Later, the diehards can get it in leather, like encylopedia's. AND having it electronically. I agree that I like having a hard copy to pull out to expand on a conversation in the living room about travel, or the arts - or whatever subject is - and actually USING it as a reference tool about obscure things my background hadn't previously exposed me to.
So yeah. Both is good. Heavy discounts for hardcopy subscribers is the business model that I imagine would work - rewarding loyalty with a searchable database of interesting information. While the actual data is already available via wiki, etc, Lapham's wide knowledge base provides an eclectic grouping of writing on a single subject that exposures one to things they wouldn't thing of/know to search for.
As an aside: what does gamma actually mean? I understand its a number, its a letter. but I don't understand what the secret code of the name is?
Quote:
Originally Posted by oden
Admittedly, you can't put your name and number in the inside cover when handed to a pretty girl!
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No - but you can get her email address and if you actually like her you will use her address to send her a book before she leaves port, so to speak. A man who likes you beyond the moment of being in your presence is kind of nice (and by kind of, I mean super nice).
So are random acts of kindness, per ATL's intentions, I think. So ATL, your value proposition as it relates to a hard copy isn't lost on me. Still, send it electronically for a small fee, or people set up one-for-one trades on their readers.
At the very least, the ability to give at least once, a book you've purchased electronically would be a good middle ground perhaps?)
Edited to add:
yep ATL, you got to my point while I was trying to think straight and go around and around verbally! Talk about real time and efficiant...