Gary North on current economic affairs and investment markets
Home | Contact Me | Tell a Friend | Text Size | Search | Member Area
 Join Us
Gain immediate access to all of our current articles, the question-and-answer forums, dozens of free books, and article archives. Click here for details on how to join.

 Free Materials
About This Site
Academic Gaps
Academic Re-Entry
Articles
Capitalism and the Bible
College Finances
Comic Strips--My Big 5
Dave Barry Re-Runs
Debt Management
Economic Analysis
Federal Reserve Charts
Gary North's Free Books
Get Published Here!
Gold Price & My Report
Keynes Project
Mira Costa 1959
Price Index (U.S.A.)
Questions for Jim Wallis
Reality Check E-Letter
Social Security/Medicare
Stock Market Charts
Study Habits
Sustained Revival
U.S. Debt Clock
Yield Curve
 For Members Only
Gary North's Miscellany
Advertising
Blogging
Budgeting for Wealth
Business Start-Up
Career Advancement
Discount Deals
Federal Reserve Policy
Fireproof Your Job
Goal-Setting for Success
Inheritance Strategies
Insurance
International Investing
Investment Basics
Marketing Case Studies
Obamanomics
Peak Oil
Precious Metals
Real Estate
Remnant Review
Retirement
Safe Places
State of the Economy
Stocks and Bonds
The Doctor Is In!
Video Channel Profits
War With Iran
Join Now
 Special Reports
Business Tools
Members' Free Manuals
Our Products
 Action Steps
Article Index
Contact Me
Help
Tell a Friend
Text Size
Your Account
 Legal Notes
My 100% Guarantee
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use


home | Articles | A Wish List for a True E-Book Reader
 

A Wish List for a True E-Book Reader
Gary North
Printer-Friendly Format

June 16, 2009

We have heard about electronic book reading devices for 40 years. One proposed name was Dynabook. There are a few readers out there today. They offer useful beginnings. But they are not yet what I need.

Karen De Koster has written why Amazon's Kindle does not make the grade.

http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/archives/025353.html

As a scholar by training and an author by trade, I know what serious students need.

1. A screen with at least 600 dots per inch (like paper)
2. A way to change the type size
3. A wide range of easily downloadable digital books and materials
4. Pricing of these materials to reflect no printing costs, shipping costs, or inventory costs
5. A way to add a voice-to-text program like Naturally Speaking
7. A way to add academic note-taking software like NoteScribe
8. A way to type in or speak in keywords for future retrieval
9. A way to listen to text-to-voice versions of the books (earphone jack, output jack for a link to a car radio input jack)
10. A way to download a speed reading training program like Ace Reader

By changing type size, you alter pagination. There would have to be a way to correlate retrieved notes with the original pagination, for citation purposes. That has been a technical barrier.

A user could use Carbonite or another on-line data storage system, so that he is not wiped out if he loses the device.

With Linux, the book reader should sell for no more than $200. Add more for Windows 7.




Printer-Friendly Format