Advantages & Disadvanteges

Posted on October 7 2009 by admin

Advantages

  • An e-book can be purchased, downloaded and used immediately, whereas when one buys a book one has to go to a bookshop, or wait for a delivery.
  • There are over 2 million free books available for download as of August 2009.
  • Educational text books (e-textbooks) can be distributed at a lower cost than print versions per student.
  • Second generation e-books (and colour e-readers) have motion capability.
  • e-Books can be printed for less than the price of traditional new books using new on demand book printers.
  • Text can be searched automatically and cross-referenced using hyperlinks.
  • A single e-reader containing several books is easier to carry around (less weight and volume) than the same books (or sometimes even a single book) in printed form. Even hundreds or thousands of books may be stored on the same device. Using removable media even more can be carried around easily.
  • Also at a fixed place such as at home it can be an advantage that an e-book collection requires very little space.
  • Mobile availability of e-books may be provided for users with a mobile data connection, so that these e-books need not be carried around.
  • E-books can allow non-permanent highlighting and annotation.
  • Font size and font face can be adjusted.
  • E-books may allow animated images or multimedia clips to be embedded.
  • E-books allow for greater fidelity in colour reproduction compared to CMYK colour printing[citation needed](although most e-book readers have only monochrome displays).
  • Depending on the device an e-book may be readable in low light or even total darkness. For devices for which this applies, energy consumption for reading without daylight is less than that of a lamp needed for reading a printed book.
  • An e-book can automatically open at the last read page.
  • While an e-book reader costs much more than one book, the electronic texts are generally cheaper. Moreover, a great share of books are available free of charge. For example, all fiction from before the year 1900 is in the public domain.
  • Text-to-speech software can be used to read the text. However, the voice will be auto-generated, thus the quality worse than audiobooks.
  • An e-book can be offered indefinitely, without ever going “out of print“.
  • Depending on possible digital rights management, it may be easy and cheap to produce a back-up for the case that the e-book is lost or damaged, and/or it may be possible to get a free new copy if that happens.
  • It is easier for authors to self-publish e-books.
  • A free e-book can stimulate the sales of the printed version.
  • The production of e-books does not consume paper, ink, etc. Printed books use 3 times more raw materials and 78 times more water to produce

Disadvantages

  • Reading e-books requires an electronic device and software. Even in the case of reading it on a personal computer one already has, it may require additional software.
  • A small book is easier to carry around than a typical e-book reader.
  • E-book readers require electrical power; in the case of mobile use, the battery can get exhausted.
  • E-book readers are more fragile than paper books and more susceptible to physical damage.
  • E-book readers can malfunction and e-books can be damaged due to faults in hardware or software.
  • E-book readers are more likely to be stolen than paper books.
  • Depending on the device an e-book may be difficult to read in bright sunlight.
  • Most publishers don’t produce the e-book equivalent of their printed books. In other cases the product quality is lower or it is released later.
  • E-books can be easily hacked through the use of hardware or software modifications and widely disseminated on the Internet and/or other e-book readers, without approval from the author or publisher. This ease of piracy is a significant drawback for publishers.
  • If an e-book device is stolen, lost, or broken beyond repair, all e-books stored on the device may be lost (Although this may be avoided by backups either on another device or by the e-book provider).
  • There is a loss of tactility and aesthetics of book-bindings. Also lost is the ability to very quickly riffle through the pages to search for a particular section or to get a sense of the book merely by sight.
  • Screen resolution of reading devices is currently lower than actual paper.
  • Due to the digital rights management reselling or lending out an e-book may have complications.
  • Some books available as e-book cannot be read on some e-book readers because they are not supplied in a format those readers allow.[citation needed]
  • While printed books remain readable for ages, changing technologies and less durable electronic storage media require e-books to be copied to a new carrier after some years.
  • E-book readers require various substances to produce, and are an environmental hazard as they’re non-biodegradable.
  • Physical discomfort for some users, including eye strain[citation needed].
  • More expensive, compared to used books.
  • A book will never break, but an ebook device can break.
  • One will never read thousands of books really well or over a short period of time, so the high amount held on an ebook reader becomes irrelevant (Though it might be useful if the ebook is used as a reference library).
  • A book is safe from electromagnetic pulses and overloads.
  • A whole paper book is never broken beyond repair, unless entirely burnt or decayed.
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4 Responses to “Advantages & Disadvanteges”

  1. I am the new owner of a Kindle 2 and even more pleased than I expected to be with it. My wife thought it was a dumb idea and now I can’t get it away from her. How do I like it, “let me count the ways……” I am 83 and have been increasingly checking out large print books from the library where I can only see the middle shelves and their spines when browzing. Now with the Kindle 2, I can change the print to suit my eyes and further, I can make more intelligent choices of books because I have more information of what is available at my finger tips. Further I can sample books before I buy in case I have forgotten that I have read them. I also subscribe to Audible.Com [an Amazon company] and buttress my Kindle 2 with beautifully read audio books when I can’t get my Kindle back from my wife. I have always been “hooked on books” and now it has never been easier to enjoy the best in the most portable manner and not especially expensive when one considers the time and transportation saved.

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