So now you suggest I might be representing the greedy publishers, hah? :) Well, maybe I am (just kidding;)
My point was, the Thout e-book is a REAL usability breakthrough in what can finally now be called e-books, and I'm NOT kidding. You can make your own annotations, highlights, remarks, bookmarks, full-text search the aforementioned(!), have private and community on-line shared part of them (and all that without leaving the reader!). It renders the pages nicely on any screen size and any device supporting Java. I can use my favorite super-sharp 1:1 fonts instead of the fuzzy pdf antialiased 'miracle' - well I know I can switch to this in pdf as well, but only ending up looking at weird unnatural pdf fonts instead of th nice system ones). PDF when used for e-books just falls short in every single thing. Yes, it's ubiquitous but so is Java and thus Thout Reader (dotReader very soon)! And BTW even if the book is DRM'd, it doesnt prevent me from printing or copying parts of the contents and pasting it into say Wordpad which is so annoying in protected pdf files...
I can see that some more points need to be explained:
- First, when you buy an e-book at Mannings, you are always getting it BOTH in PDF and Thout Reader format (when available)
- Second, the Thout Reader is open-source, as is Java (now), and the format will be suporrted for many years to come - the successor of Thout Reader is backward compatible and it's gonna always support the older, Thout format (visit dotReader.com - don't get scared by the name, it's still in Java;)
- BTW, even if it was readable, say, only like 3 years from now, who cares about old tech books anyway? 3 yrs in Java and/or Hibernate are like 15 yrs in some other fields :)
- And last, but not least - DRMs or not - don't you think that book authors should get paid for their work if you like it and if it makes a big difference in your productivity? This book (the first issue, for sure) is such a buddy. Why to steal it then?
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