Thursday, July 15, 2010

iPad for grown-ups: reading books

I have been reading lots of educators postings about the iPad sharing all kinds of cool ways to use them in school and for learning, but I have always known that when I finally get one it will be for me!  Because I am a reader and everyone I live with is a reader (Define: reader  = a person who reads fiction regularly during the school term as well as serious work-related material; a person who will stay up into the wee hours of the morning during a working week on occasion reading fiction until it is finished!). When we all go on holiday together too much of the car boot space is taken up with library books. So the advent of a versitile eBook reader will be a wonderful asset to our household.

For the past week I have had an iPad and today I sadly/gladly handed it over to the person I bought it for.  I would have bought two so I could have one for myself, but we searched six states in the USA as we travelled and we only ever managed to find the one wifi iPad sitting in a store waiting to be bought - at Best Buy in Medina, Ohio.

So while I had the iPad I downloaded the Apple book reader, iBooks; the Barnes and Noble book reader; Amazon's Kindle reader; Borders' book reading app; and a free one called Free Books.

Then I bought a few books, took advantage of Barnes and Nobles free eBooks and downloaded lots from Project Gutenburg.  I also added a few lengthy .pdfs that I had been meaning to read. Then I tried to squeeze in as much reading time as I could. Fortunately a flight from one coast of the US to the other, a 6 hour stop-over in LAX and a 12 hour flight to NZ gave plenty of opportunity to read a few books and documents.

Here are some of my thoughts from the past week of reading....
There really wasn't a lot to pick and choose between the reading apps.  They all had nice page turning, bookmarks, the ability to go online and lookup words or information (if you have wireless - which of course I never had on a plane).  They did the double page landscape and the single page portrait.  I was a bit miffed that it was only pdfs that you could pinch and squeeze to enlarge text.  I had anticipated being able to do that with books and give aging eyes a break.

The real differences come in what they allowed you to download or to buy. Project Gutenburg is currently providing the backbone to all of the reading apps and the free book giveaways. It has 33,000 titles available to download for free and it is surprising to discover which books are already out of copyright and have now been digitised by the team of volunteers working on this project. All the classics and childhood favourites are there. I think that the Free Book app has the best interface of the ones I tried for reading these. I notice that if you go to the iTunes Store it is a free download, but the weblink is charging $1.99.

I presume the iBook reader is not yet available in NZ because iPads are not here yet. And if it is like the music and movie iTunes store, the US offerings will be different from the NZ ones. So that works fine if you have a US account.  Barnes and Noble work from IP address and will not sell to anyone outside North America.  I really don't know what that is about.  I downloaded lots while I was there, but know that there will be nothing more from now on - unless anyone cares to email me some of the next round of free books ;)  Amazon is quite bizarrre.  While I had a US IP address, they knew I was a New Zealand customer and wanted to charge me a $2 shipping fee!!! for eBooks.  So I didn't try any of theirs. And Borders seemed to be the most straight forward.  Give them your credit card and they will sell you an eBook.  I like that non-discriminatory approach.

Most of the readers offer the option to read in sepia rather than just black on white.  That is a nice option for the eyes.  And I did like the way I was able to turn the backlight brightness down on the plane to give my eyes a rest too.  The battery lasted easily for 10 hours, but we discovered today that it is a trial when you are up to a good part in a book and the battery goes flat.  Talk about frustrating.

Reading in bed with it is fine.  Reading on the plane was not quite as good.  Planes are uncomfortable at the best of times and the iPad didn't squish into the confined space in the same way a paperback does. But reading pdfs on a plane via iPad is way better than wads of printouts.  If you are a person who falls asleep over your reading and lets a book slide to the floor with a thunk, then you would need to invest in a good protective case!

Biggest frustration; not being able to quickly flip back through the pages when you have lost a piece of plot context and you want to check up on something that happened earlier.  
In conclusion, it is probably clear from this post that I am a fan of the iPad as a book reading device for grown-ups.

5 comments:

  1. Oh no, I can't believe you managed to get only one iPad and it wasn't for you! I think I visited about 13 Apple stores before I got mine. I never did get the elusive Apple cover though until eventually my sister found one in an Apple store in Australia just last month! I've got a US iTunes account as well as a NZ one and I madly bought gift cards while in the US so I could purchase iPad apps not available in NZ. I've noticed in the last few weeks that many of these are now available on the NZ store though including iBooks, Pages, Keynote etc. I find reading on the iPad really enjoyable but I haven't bought a lot of ebooks yet I've stuck mostly with iBooks). I'm not quite ready to give up the joy of adding to the books on my overloaded shelves and I confess I love the smell of books as well! How to decide what to buy online and what to buy in hard copy is the question in my mind??? My 11 year old also loves reading on the iPad and her reasons are rather different than mine - she loves turning the pages and the fact that she can bookmark the exact word she is up to rather than just a page!

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  2. I'm a bit surprised you had those issues with barnes and noble and amazon. While geographic restrictions mean I can't get every book - I don't have any issues with the ones with full rights. Btw it is the first four numbers of your credit card that give it away as a nz card (or an Australian one). I haven't tried borders yet. There seem to be heaps around in Brisbane - they're about $680 for the wireless one - bit more for 3G.
    Althought

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  3. Thank you from Anna Dumas, in Dr. Strange's EDM310 class at South Alabama! I really am glad you posted some information about the iPad book reading options because I myself am starting to look into purchasing an iPad. I just recently bought a new MacBook Pro but want something that is in between the size of my iPhone and laptop. I have really enjoyed reading your technology post, and will continue well after this course is over! Feel free again to check out my blog at dumasannamarieedm310.blogspot.com

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  4. Hi Anna, I do hope you get an iPad soon and you can come back here and let us know what it is like. I am always recommending the blogs of the South Alabama students to people to read. I think it is an amazing course you have there and I wish it was offered in NZ. Glad to see you making the most of it.

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  5. Hi Anna, Once you get your iPad you will you will be happy. I would like to know more about the South Alabama students.

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