Google Books is a good thing. I came across a reference to an anthology of poetry in a newspaper article today, and I wanted to track down the book. It's an old anthology, published in 1917 or thereabouts. It does look like I could get a used copy on Amazon, but it's old enough that I can download it in PDF format from Google. Their copy seems to have come from Harvard's library, and looks to be pretty well beat up, which is kind of cool. This book includes one of my favorite poems, "Mending Wall" by Robert Frost: "Something there is that doesn't love a wall..."
There was a good little article on ghost stories in Saturday's Wall Street Journal. Two of their recommendations -- Ghost Stories by M. R. James and The Turn of the Screw by Henry James, are available at manybooks.net in Kindle format. I think I'm going to read some ghost stories for Halloween!
Interesting article about the relationship between our devices and our attention spans. The author quotes Jeff Bezos, who hopes the "Kindle and its successors may gradually and incrementally move us over years into a world with longer spans of attention." I guess we shouldn't expect a Twitter client to be built into the Kindle any time soon!
I've gotten a good number of books through Bookmooch since I joined up a couple of weeks ago. I just got a Flannery O’Connor short story collection in the mail today. I've only read a few of her stories, so I'm looking forward to reading more.
And I also just got approved for a free account on britannica.com, through their WebShare program, so I guess I'm a bona fide "web publisher" now. Either that, or they just rubber-stamped all the applications for this program. Either way, the Flannery O'Connor link above is to a Britannica article. The Britannica site is OK, but some of the bells & whistles they've got on it make it a little difficult to actually read the article, at least through Firefox.
Wikipedia has a reasonable article on her too, of course.
I bought The Last Lecture in Kindle format a few days ago. I'm almost done reading it. It's a pretty good read. Lots of short chapters, mostly random anecdotes from Randy Pausch's life. There's nothing in the book that's likely to change my life, I think, but just a lot of interesting little insights, and some fun stories. This is also the first book I'm reading, in its entirety, on the Kindle. It's been a pretty smooth reading experience. Certainly no worse than reading an old-fashioned paper book, but not necessarily any better. Of course, there are some photos in the book, and they really don't look at all good on the Kindle, so that's a concern. In the future, I'll probably avoid buying any book for the Kindle if I know it's heavy with photos or other graphics.
After my post about BookMooch last night, I wound up listing some more books, about 30 in total. And, this morning, I had requests for a number of them. I've now got eight packages ready to bring over to the post office tomorrow morning. I'm sending most of them media mail, so it shouldn't be too expensive. One's going to Canada, though, so I think I'll send that one in a flat-rate Priority Mail envelope. It'll cost me a few bucks, but BookMooch gives you three points for shipping internationally, so I should get three books out of this one trade.
On the receiving side, I've got three books coming to me. I've added most of the books on my Amazon wish list to my BookMooch wish list. Aside from the three that are coming, I don't think any of the others are out there in the BookMooch system anywhere right now. I'll have to look around and see if anyone's got anything I'm interested in, so I can use up some of the points I'm getting from sending out so much stuff.
There was an article on CNET today about Bookmooch. This is a book-trading site, basically, similar to LaLa or Peerflix, only for books. The setup is pretty simple. You get a point for every book you send out; every book you "mooch" from someone else costs a point. You get a tenth of a point just for listing a book in your inventory. So I got one point by listing ten books, and now I've got a William Gibson novel on its way to me. And I'm sending out a Star Wars novel, so that gets me another point. I don't know if this will result in overall fewer books in my apartment, or more books, but if nothing else, I'm at least moving some stuff around.
If this works right, this should be a widget showing some of the books I've listed:
Here's an interesting little article on the idea of reading e-books on a cellphone, in this case, a BlackBerry. The newer BlackBerries have pretty decent screens, but I still don't think I'd want to read a book on one. I'll stick with the Kindle!
I blogged about Randy Pausch's Last Lecture back in September. (Well, I just linked to the video. I didn't really say anything about it.) He's now got a book available, based on that lecture. It's available from Amazon, in hardcover, Kindle, and audio CD versions. And the audiobook is also available from iTunes. There's also a page up at the Carnegie Mellon site, with links to various versions of the original lecture (DVD, PDF transcript, etc) and other related links. I guess this all took off after ABC aired a special on him about a week ago.
The whole "inspirational" thing makes me kind of queasy, especially when people like Oprah and Diane Sawyer get involved. But, hey, Randy's a computer science guy, so it's OK for me to be interested, right? I'll probably read a sample of the book on my Kindle, and if it doesn't look like it's just the lecture, padded out to fill a book, then I'll shell out the $10 and read the whole thing. Or maybe I should buy the hardcover through the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network site, so they get a few bucks from it.
The BBC has a bunch of Doctor Who ebooks available for free download. So that's another three or four free books I've got loaded onto my Kindle now. I don't know if any of them are any good, but they didn't cost me anything, and they aren't taking up much disk space, so no big problem there, right?
I'm still loading my Kindle up with free stuff. I haven't bought a single ebook from Amazon yet. I just re-discovered the 2007 Nebula page at Fictionwise, which lists a bunch of Nebula-nominated stories from last year that are available from them for free. And I also just noticed that Fictionwise has a number of magazines available in Kindle-compatible formats, including Analog and a few other SF and mystery magazines. I've been somewhat disappointed in Amazon's selection of magazines for the Kindle; they've only got 11 magazines available, and none of them are primarily fiction magazines. I may decide to try out a couple of magazines from Fictionwise and see if they work well on the Kindle.
Right after the Kindle was released, there was a lot of talk about the DRM/licensing model it used. The subject seems to have come up again this weekend, starting with a post on Gizmodo that got referenced on Slashdot and Boing Boing. If you look through the comments on all three of these sites, you'll see some well though out opinions, plus of course some less (perhaps) cogent ones.
I've loaded my Kindle up with a fair number of free (and legal) non-DRM'd ebooks from various sources. I do intend on buying some stuff from the Amazon store at some point, but just haven't gotten around to it yet. Yes, I do know that I won't really be *buying* these books, but rather just buying a license to read them on a particular device under specific conditions. I'm OK with that. I usually only read a given book once or twice, and I don't feel the need to keep a copy of every book I've ever read, so I really won't mind it if my Kindle ebook "library" disappears if I ever decide to just get rid of my Kindle. If I buy an ebook that's really great, and I really want to keep a copy around, I'll probably go out and buy a hard copy too.
One of the arguments that I see come up frequently is the idea that if DRM'd ebooks *completely* replace hard copy books, then various really good things about the current book economy will go away -- lending books to friends, buying cheap used books, borrowing books from the library and so on. I really don't think we need to worry about this happening any time in the near future. I think the ebook reader market is going to remain a niche market for quite a while. Even if the price comes down, it's just not a model that's going to appeal to most people. There are a lot of people who just don't read enough to warrant buying any kind of dedicated device for reading. Just picking up an occasional paperback at Border's, or the library, or the airport bookstore, is more than enough for them.
And I don't think that the iPhone, or smartphones in general, and going to be used as ebook readers by too many people. That's also an opinion I've seen tossed around a bit. I think the iPhone (or iPod Touch in my case) is great for browsing through the NY Times site and checking out a few articles, but I wouldn't want to try and read a novel on it.
So I guess that's my (more than) two cents on the Kindle DRM thing. I don't know if anyone will find this post particularly useful or interesting, but I just had to get all that off my chest.
I got a Kindle today. I ordered it back in early February, so it took about a month for Amazon to get it out the door. It's pretty much what I expected. The screen is very readable, in any (reasonable) light. As many others have pointed out, the button layout makes it a little awkward to figure out a good way to hold the thing without pressing either the next page or previous page button. I think I'll get used to it though.
The built-in web browser is interesting, and might be somewhat useful. Gmail seems to be usable on it. Lotus Notes webmail is out of the question, though. Mobile-friendly sites like http://nytimesriver.com/ ought to be useable.
I haven't bought any books for it yet. For now, I've just got some free books on it that I downloaded from ManyBooks and Tor.
For the most part, I'm liking it. I have so many hard copy books sitting around that I won't be using it for most of my reading any time soon, but I'll start reading something on it soon, just to start using it. I'll likely blog more about it after I've played around with it some more.
Steven Levitt has a short bit up on the Freakonomics blog mentioning that he's just finished the last Harry Potter book, and now has been "left aimless in Harry’s absence" and would like to know what he can read to "restore meaning to his life." There are a lot of great suggestions in the comments, including not just books, but some comics too.
It's interesting to see what people think of when they're asked to suggest new material to a Harry Potter fan. The Potter books have a certain ineffable quality to them that has made them popular far beyond the audience that would usually be attracted to a "young adult" fantasy series. Mr. Levitt certainly doesn't seem like the kind of guy who reads a lot of Piers Anthony, for instance. (Not that there's anything wrong with Piers Anthony.) I do think that any open-minded, intelligent reader could find some great underrated stuff in the SF & Fantasy aisle in Borders, given a little direction, though.
Pullman's "His Dark Materials" trilogy is mentioned by several commenters. That's certainly a work that has some superficial similarities to the Potter books -- it's a fantasy series featuring a couple of young kids as protagonists. And it's a great work. I think somebody could probably get a great term paper out of comparing and contrasting the themes in Potter vs HDM. (And, come to think of it, I'd bet a good number of high school students probably already *have* written that paper.)
There are several recommendations for the Discworld books by Terry Pratchett. Also great books, but different in tone from Harry Potter. Come to think of it, I've only read one Discworld book (Mort). I think I have another one around here somewhere waiting to be read. I should really dig that out and read it.
On the comics front, there are a few recommendations for Fables, which I blogged about recently. (I now have the first six volumes waiting to be read.) And Neil Gaiman's Sandman (and some other Gaiman stuff) gets mentioned. (I've read all of Sandman, and I'd certainly second the recommendation on that.)
Stephen King's Dark Tower series gets a couple of mentions. I haven't read any of that, but I'm getting curious about it. Maybe after I get through some of the other stuff in my pile, I'll pick up a couple of Dark Tower books and give them a try.
Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell gets a couple of nods. I read that a couple of years ago, and it's great. Definitely a good book to read after the Potter series, if you're interested in seeing how another great author handles magic.
There are a couple of recommendations for Orson Scott Card's Ender books. I've read the first, Ender's Game, and have the next few in a pile waiting to be read. Good stuff, but I don't really see any relation to Potter, other than (again) a young protagonist.
And Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next novels get mentioned too. I've now read through all but the most recent Thursday Next book, and I'm definitely worried about withdrawal after I finally finish that one! (Hopefully, Fforde hasn't finished with Thursday books yet, though.)
So, in a nutshell, there's lots of great stuff to read out there, both books and comics! I'm curious as to whether Mr. Levitt would consider picking up any of the comics work mentioned in the comments. Would a serious economist like him consider picking up a Sandman or Fables graphic novel? Would your average businessman want to be seen reading a comic in public? I don't know. It's never been a concern for me, but then again, I'm a nerd, and proud of it.
I just noticed a post by Tim O'Reilly on the Kindle over at Radar. He talks a bit about the possibility of getting O'Reilly books out on the Kindle. In one of the comments, something interesting is mentioned: The Kindle has no monospaced font! That's really a big problem, when you start getting into code samples in programming books. Oh well, yet another obstacle keeping me from the Holy Grail of tossing all my 1500-page programming books and replacing them with e-book equivalents.
A friend's niece is going on a class trip to Paris soon. That made me think of my trip to Paris back in high school. I'm not going to write a long post reminiscing about that, but I thought I'd just post links to a couple of books on Amazon about Paris, mostly just because I wanted to play around with the function that allows you to do that from the Amazon Media Library.
The two books above were reviewed in The Economist a few years back, and I got interested in them based on that review. I had meant to buy them for myself at some point, but someone bought them for me as a gift before I'd gotten around to doing that.
I just entered a bunch of books into Delicious Library on my Mac. I hadn't bothered entering anything into there since I got my new MacBook. Since the new MacBook has an iSight camera built in, I was kind of curious to see how the scanning function would work. Well, it scanned the bar codes OK, and came up with the correct UPCs, but it didn't once pull the correct item for the UPC. I tried it on about ten books, and it didn't work on any of them. I gave up, and went back to just typing in the ISBNs.
I then tried exporting from DL and importing to Amazon's Media Library. I cut the ISBNs from DL's export file, and pasted them into a separate text file, since Amazon seems to just want one ISBN per line, and nothing else. Amazon read in the file, and recognized about 20 items out of 80. Not a great success rate. I didn't really try to troubleshoot that import at all, though, so maybe I messed something up. Amazon also has a scanning function similar to DL's. I gave that a try, but I couldn't get it to recognize my bar codes at all.
The thing that got me started on this was an attempt to figure out exactly which William Marshall books I own. Last night, I noticed one on Amazon (The Far Away Man) that didn't sound familiar, so I ordered it. I guess there are a few others I haven't read yet either, based on the list at Overbooked.
Just for yuks, I put a couple of old books up for sale on Amazon today. Apparently, this is my storefront. (Impressive, huh?)
Looking at the way they handle used book sales, and looking at all the folks selling their books for a penny, there's really no way for an individual small-time seller to make any money selling readily-available books.
I put my books up at $1. Amazon apparently takes a minimum $2.50 commission, but they credit you $4 for shipping. So, the end result is that I would get $2.50 total, which would have to cover my shipping costs. It looks like a one-pound media mail shipment costs $2.13 now, so that doesn't leave much room for profit. Since they don't charge for listing stuff, though, I guess it doesn't hurt to list some stuff and see if anybody bites.
I've been thinking about the Kindle again. I still haven't quite decided to buy one, but I'm getting closer.
Here's a scenario that's got me thinking: (It's kind of a long story, so bear with me.) I bought the audiobook version of Brad Meltzer's "Zero Game" from iTunes awhile ago. I've been listening to it in the car, and enjoying it quite a bit. I hit a point, though, where the audio just cut out and skipped ahead about five chapters. I went back and forth with Apple about it, and eventually got a refund. (They tell me that they've now posted a corrected version, so if you're interested in the book, don't let this glitch stop you from buying it!)
While I was going back and forth with support, though, I really wanted to just continue reading the book. If I'd had a Kindle, I could have just bought it from Amazon, and picked up reading the missing parts the same day I hit the glitch.
I did wind up buying a used hardcover copy of the book from Amazon so I could read the missing part. Now, while that obviously took longer to get to me than the Kindle version would have, it was a bit cheaper, and I can (theoretically) resell it, or just give it away, when I'm done reading it.
However, I'm sitting here right now looking at the book, and thinking that I'm probably going to just toss it on the floor in a pile of other old books when I'm done with it. The used book system on Amazon is great for buyers, but they've driven down prices on used books so much that there's not much point trying to sell it after I'm done with it. And I don't know anybody who'd really be interested in reading it who I could hand it off to. And I know I'll never talk myself into just throwing it out.
I've got a whole bunch of books that fall into this category. Basically, books that I'm probably never going to want to re-read, and have almost no resale value, but I can't bring myself to throw them out.
In some ways, the economics of this seem almost perverse, but I think I might be willing to pay a little extra to buy a book that doesn't leave any physical footprint in my tiny little apartment. Something I can keep on a device, or my computer's hard drive, or wherever, for however long I want. It's annoying that the DRM scheme on any e-book reader (Sony or Amazon) will prevent me from loaning or giving away my old "books." And it's a little galling that the e-books generally cost more than a used copy in hardcover or paperback. But I'm looking at this apartment full of old books, and thinking that I could really reclaim a lot of space if I could just get rid of some of them!
Having said that, though, there are certainly still a lot of books I'd like to keep in hard copy form. Jasper Fforde's books, for instance, wouldn't work well on a Kindle, since he plays with fonts, footnotes, and other odd stuff that wouldn't translate well into the single-typeface Kindle. In fact, Fforde's concept of the "UltraWord" system, introduced in "Well of Lost Plots", is, in some ways, a parody of DRM'd e-book systems. One of the characteristics of UltraWord was that you could only read any given book three times, then it would just refuse to open.
I'm aware that buying DRM'd e-books right now, for any platform, will probably leave me with books that I won't be able to read again past, say, five or ten years, since whatever platform I buy now will probably be gone by then. I bought Philip Pullman's "His Dark Materials" trilogy in Microsoft Reader format several years back, and read them on my old Toshiba Pocket PC. While I still have those files around somewhere, I don't have the Pocket PC anymore. If I want to read those books again on the Kindle, I'd have to repurchase them. (And, hey, I see that I can get them for the Kindle, for $3.19 each. That's actually not a bad price. Cheaper than the average used copy, even.)
I blogged about the Sony Reader a couple of months back. The Amazon Kindle is out now too. One of the things I didn't like about the Sony Reader was the lack of technical books. I did a little searching on Amazon, and they definitely seem to have a better supply of programming books available than Sony. The pricing on them isn't great though. For instance, ASP.NET 2.0 Unleashed is $36 on Amazon for the dead tree version, and $32 for the Kindle version. That book is almost 2000 pages, and weighs 6 pounds, so I can understand why the physical version costs so much, but I think they should really be able to deliver the electronic version at a significantly lower price. Leaving that aside for now, it's still pretty compelling to switch from having a big pile of 2000 page, 6 pound books to having a single device weighing less than one pound holding multiple books. And I still think the idea of a partnership with Safari would be great, but I guess that's too much to ask for at this point.
There have been some interesting reactions to the Kindle, from people like Scoble and Mossberg. One thing that concerns me is that both of those guys have pointed out some interface problems that make the device a little frustrating to use.
Cory Doctorow pointed out a few negatives on a post on BoingBoing, and talked about it a bit during an episode of TWiT from a few weeks back. His big problem is basically the DRM and TOS stuff. I don't necessarily mind DRM, if it's done well, and if I can trust that the company behind it will be supporting the system for a while. In other words, I don't have a big problem with iTunes DRM, but I don't really trust that anyone else's DRM is going to be around long enough to make it worth my while to invest any money in it. Of course, I'd rather just not have *any* DRM, but that just doesn't seem feasible right now. I know we're getting there on music, but it doesn't look like we're anywhere near there on books yet.
I really like the wireless purchase and delivery system on the Kindle. That seems much better than the Sony system. I think that if they can get some of the interface kinks ironed out in the next iteration of the hardware, bring down book prices a bit, and maybe bring the price of the device itself down, then I'll be ready to take the plunge and get one.
I didn't do much today, aside from watching football. I'm not making any major resolutions this year either. I did make all the arrangements to go to WonderCon today though. As usual, I wasn't really sure I wanted to go this year, but a few things convinced me to go again. Basically, a good guest lineup, plus a general desire to get out of New Jersey for a few days. And a chance to see the Chinese New Year Parade again!
I haven't really done much reflection on 2007. Normally, I would get kind of reflective on New Year's Day, but I haven't really been in that frame of mind. Well, just for the heck of it, here are some things I've done in 2007:
Books and comics I've read and liked:
Absolute Watchmen
Nextwave
David Allen's Getting Things Done and Ready for Anything (though I haven't finished RFA yet)
the first two Jasper Fforde "Thursday Next" novels
a couple of Jim Butcher "Harry Dresden" novels
Movies & TV shows I've enjoyed:
Paprika (my favorite movie of the year, for whatever that's worth)
Once
Ratatouille
The Simpsons Movie
Rise: Blood Hunter (okay, not exactly high-brow, but fun)
Torchwood
Life on Mars
Heroes
Music I've liked:
Wilco - Sky Blue Sky
Ryan Adams - Easy Tiger
Paul McCartney - Memory Almost Full
Pizzicato Five - Made in USA (from 1994, but I'd never heard it until this year)
Derek and the Dominoes - Layla (I only just got around to buying this CD in 2007)
Pointless stuff I've spent money on:
new couch
iPod Touch
TomTom One LE GPS
Dell Inspiron laptop
MacBook
Microsoft Office 2007
Motorola SLVR
19" widescreen LG monitor
Toshiba HD-DVD player
Things I didn't get around to doing:
buying a new car (the old one's still working, but maybe not for much longer)
checking out the new Greek and Roman galleries at the Met
visiting the new Morimoto restaurant in NYC
Well, that's just a bunch of random lists off the top of my head. I guess the two big things that happened in 2007 for me were the office move my company did (from Edison to Somerset), and my mostly successful implementation of GTD.
I haven't gotten around to blogging in the last couple of weeks. Things have been pretty hectic. I'm trying to relax right now, so I thought I'd just write up a few random bits.
I picked up a TomTom One LE GPS unit at Best Buy last week. I don't really need a GPS often. Most of my driving is just back and forth to work. But, it will definitely come in handy once in a while. I used it today to help me find my way to my friend Paul's house in New York. I've been there before, but not recently. The GPS was definitely a help. In particular, there's one point where I need to make a turn onto a side street that's pretty well hidden, until you're right on top of it. The GPS takes care of that nicely by announcing the turn in advance, then again when you're right there. It really makes things easier.
I've been working my way through the Thursday Next novels by Jasper Fforde. I'm on the third book now, Well of Lost Plots. It's starting out quite nicely. I'm really enjoying these books. Lots of fun, weird, stuff.
I installed the trial version of VMware Fusion on my MacBook yesterday, and installed Windows XP into a virtual machine. It works pretty well. It's a little slow, but a lot better than previous virtual machine products that I've used on the Mac. (Of course, this is the first time I've used an Intel Mac, so right there you've got a major advantage.) Oh, and I've got to say, I think it's time for Windows XP SP3. I installed XP with SP2, and had 90 patches to install from Windows Update. Hey Microsoft, isn't that enough patches to warrant a service pack? That's one of the nice things about Apple that we maybe take for granted. OS X 10.4 went from 10.4.0 to 10.4.10, and each of those point releases is cumulative, so you never have too many individual patches to install on a Mac.
I started reading this post on the NY Times site earlier this evening. I had to stop and bookmark it for later, since there were so many interesting lists in the comments. If you're looking for a good book to read, just run though the comments and pick one out! So many good books, so little time. I'd second the many recommendations for 100 Years of Solitude. Ditto for the Harry Potter books, the Dark Materials trilogy, Hitchhiker's Guide, Shakespeare, Vonnegut, Borges, Bradbury, Flannery O'Connor, and a bunch of others.
And there are some interesting recommendations for books I haven't read, but that might be worth adding to my Amazon wish list: Kafka on the Shore by Haruki Murakami, for instance. I ran across a reference to one of his other books recently, but, prior to last week, I'd never heard of him.
The Road got a few mentions, and that's another one I haven't read. Looking at the description now, though, I see that there are cannibals in the book. I generally find that I'm disappointed by any book with cannibals in it, so maybe I'll avoid that. And it's got the Oprah stamp on it too, which is kind of scary.
And this list reminds me, again, that I still haven't gotten around to reading Animal Farm. Sigh.
I was wandering around Costco today, and saw that they had the Sony Reader PRS-500 on sale for $250. I almost picked one up, but thought better of it. I'm glad I did, since a little research reveals that the new model, the PRS-505 came out last week. It's available for $300 direct from Sony. I've been mighty tempted to pick one of these things up since they were first announced about a year ago, but I figured I should wait for the second gen, at least, assuming there would be one. Well, I guess now there is.
It's still not altogether that compelling. It does 8 shades of grey (vs. 4 on the old one). Supposedly the screen refresh is faster. The interface seems to have been improved a bit. It appears that it still doesn't support full-text search within a book, though. I really think that a decent search interface, along with the availability of a large number of technical reference books, would make this a killler device for programmers and other tech folks. And a partnership with Safari would be great too. Imagine being able to sync all the books on your Safari bookshelf down to this device. Safari's nice, but you can't really just sit back in a recliner and read a book off the Safari web site; it's basically just good for reference. (I guess you *could* read a book off Safari, but I'm not comfortable doing it, even with my iBook. Notebook screens just aren't good enough for extended reading sessions. At least for my tired old eyes.)
It's still an interesting device, even if it's only good for stuff that you're going to read in a linear fashion -- novels, mostly, and maybe some non-fiction. I like the idea of carrying a nice small device around, rather than carrying, say, the 1250-page Essential Ellison. Of course, they don't have much Ellison available at the Sony ebook store. Heck, they don't have any Tolkien, or any of the Harry Potter books either.
A few months back, I blogged about ACM's deal with Safari and Books 24x7, where ACM members can access a subset of these online libraries. At the time, the book selection on both sites seemed to be a bit out of date. Well, they've updated the selection on both sites today, and there's definitely more useful stuff up there now. They've (finally) got some ASP.NET 2.0 stuff, including the "ASP.NET 2.0 Core Reference" book by Dino Esposito, which is pretty useful. They even have some stuff on WCF and WPF.
The printing capabilities on Safari have gotten a bit more useful, too. I don't remember exactly how it used to work, but it's definitely easier to print a big chunk of text than it used to be.
I'm not sure that much has changed on the Books 24x7 site, though. I think there's more .Net 2.0 stuff than there used to be, but I did a search on "Vista" and found nothing at all, initially. That's not good. (I later found two Vista books that inexplicably did not show up when I searched for "vista".) The Safari site has about four Vista books, which is OK, but not great.
I read a post on someone's blog today that made me a bit curious. He mentioned that some other bloggers had been posting their first Amazon.com purchase. I decided to go back and check mine. It was on June 26, 1997, and I ordered two books: Mort, by Terry Pratchett, and the Sybase DBA Companion. Mort was a great, and very funny, novel. It was out of print at the time, and didn't actually ship until May 17, 1998. At that time, Amazon had a service where you could order a book, and whenever a used copy became available, it would be shipped to you. I'm not sure if they do that anymore. So many people are selling used books through Amazon now, that it'd be pretty odd to find something that you couldn't get from a secondary seller right away.
The other book I ordered, the Sybase DBA Companion, was pretty useful at the time, since I was just getting started on Sybase. I've since moved to Microsoft SQL Server, but a lot of the skills I developed working on Sybase are still useful, since Microsoft's product was kind of a spin-off from Sybase, though it's diverged a lot over the last ten years.
My second order with Amazon was on August 15, 1997, and was for a book called Programming for the Newton Using Windows . That sure brings back some memories! I don't think I ever got around to writing anything more that a couple of trivial programs for the Newton, but it was fun to play around with Newton programming for a while. I've since given away my first Newton, and sold my second. I'm using a Palm PDA now, the i705. I still haven't gotten around to giving it up in favor of a smartphone or anything like that. Maybe I'll get an iPhone, and then I'll have come full circle, in a way, back to an Apple PDA of sorts.
I just bought a license for Delicious Library, as part of a bundle of Mac apps from MacHeist. I haven't really tried to catalog my CDs, DVDs and/or books at any time in the last twenty years, but I'm always at least slightly tempted to give it a go. If I did, I'd want to be able to sync my library to LibraryThing.com, so it'd all be out there on the internet too.
I've been playing around today with the online book access I can get through ACM. You can get access to about 500 books from Safari and 400 from Books 24x7. Mind you, there are thousands of books on the main Safari site, and thousands more on the main Books 24x7 site. A regular Safari subscription is $20 per month, and Books 24x7 is about $450 per year, so both those options are a bit expensive. There are some useful titles among the limited library of books available through ACM, but not too many recent ones. For instance, there's a good bit of stuff on .Net 1.1, but very little on .Net 2.0. I don't think I could just stop buying computer books, based on the selection available through ACM, but there is some good reference stuff there. There's also not much you can do in the way of printing from either service, within the ACM section. Still, I'm going to try to keep this stuff in mind before running out and buying any more computer books, and I'm going to try to remember to seach these services the next time I'm trying to solve a programming problem.