iBookend - for those that can’t think of a use for the iPad ;-)
via vi-rosenrot
Spying on how we read by Music Machinery (via champagnecandy):
One feature of the Kindle software is called Whispersync. It keeps track of where you are in a book so that if you switch devices (from an iPhone to a Kindle or an iPad or desktop), you can pick up exactly where you left off. Kindle also stores any bookmarks, notes, highlights, or similar markings you make in the cloud so they can be shared across devices. Whispersync is a useful feature for readers, but it is also a goldmine of data for Amazon.
Some charts I’d like to see:
Most Abandoned - the books and/or authors that are most frequently left unfinished. What book is the most abandoned book of all time? (My money is on ‘A Brief History of Time’) A related metric – for any particular book where is it most frequently abandoned?
Pageturner – the top books ordered by average number of words read per reading session. Does the average Harry Potter fan read more of the book in one sitting than the average Twilight fan?
Burning the midnight oil – books that keep people up late at night.
Read Speed – which books/authors/genres have the lowest word-per-minute average reading rate? Do readers of Glenn Beck read faster or slower than readers of Jon Stewart?
Most Re-read – which books are read over and over again? A related metric – which are the most re-read passages? Is it when Frodo claims the ring, or when Bella almost gets hit by a car?
Valuable reference – which books are not read in order, but are visited very frequently? (I’ve not read my Python in a nutshell book from cover to cover, but I visit it almost every day).
Biggest Slogs – the books that take the longest to read.
Trophy Books – books that are most frequently purchased, but never actually read.
Most efficient language – the average time to read books by language. Do native Italians read ‘Il nome della rosa‘ faster than native English speakers can read ‘The name of the rose‘?
Entertainment value – the books with the lowest overall cost per hour of reading (including all re-reads)
40 years ago you could open the hood of your car and see and touch just about every component in there. And you had to, because many of those components required frequent maintenance. To properly own a car required, to some degree, that you understood how a car worked.
Today, you open the hood of your car and you see a big sealed block and a basin for the windshield washer fluid. You can buy a new car, drive it for years, and never once open the hood yourself.
That’s the iPad.
thedailywhat’s guide to the question “Should I buy an iPad?”
Amusing. I’m not a big apple fan (although, yes I am being tempted away from my beloved HTC Touch Pro 2 by the new iPhone…we’ll see)…it does annoy me that fan boys just jump on the latest Apple product. I’m reserving total judgement until I see one.