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Larry Magid

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Soon There Will Be No More Shelves of Books and CDs

Posted: 07/02/2012 7:34 pm

I was sitting at home looking at the shelves that store our books, CDs, videotapes and DVDs, and realized how much of a story they tell. If you look at our books, you can get a pretty good idea of what we studied in school, our hobbies, interests and even our political beliefs. If you gaze at our CD and DVD collection, you'll know something about our tastes in movies and music.

I find the same is true when I visit other people's homes. I don't snoop around, but I sometimes do glance at their books and CDs to see what we might have in common.

But none of this will be possible in the future as we transition from physical to digital media. Already, I have scores of books in my Amazon library, which are only visible if you have access to my Kindle or iPad. Anyone with access to my Roku or tablet can peruse the movies and TV shows I've purchased in the past few years, but not a single one is visible on our shelves.

The loss of this visible manifestation of who we are may be of little consequence to most people, but it's a loss worth noting.

While there won't be an imminent demise of books, CDs and DVDs, they are all endangered species. I'm pretty sure that physical books will continue to be printed for the foreseeable future, but they'll eventually become expensive luxury items. If for no other reason than cost, by the end of this decade most of us will be reading almost exclusively on screens.


Not all bad

That's far from all bad. For the most part, I prefer e-books to paper books. For one thing, they reduce the load I need to carry when I travel. As I wing my way around the world, I have dozens of books at my disposal either in the "cloud" (on Amazon's servers, available to download at any time) or on the devices themselves. I keep books on my iPad, on my Amazon Kindle Fire and even on my smartphone. While I prefer reading on larger screens, I do occasionally read a chapter or two on my phone if I find myself waiting for an appointment or a plane. I also like how easy it is to order books. One time, when I was waiting for a flight, I got into a discussion with someone about a physical book he was reading after the cover piqued my interest, so I downloaded it on the spot and read it on the flight. Good thing he was reading a physical book. It's pretty hard to know what someone's reading on an e-reader or a tablet.

One thing that would help the transition to digital books is a common standard. I hate that I have to use different devices or apps for different books. I don't have one shelf for books that I bought at my local Kepler's bookstore and another for books I picked up at Borders before it closed. Why should I need separate readers or devices for books from Amazon and Barnes & Noble?

I'm also hoping that it will become easier to lend or give away books. Amazon does let people loan out some Kindle books for a period of 14 days, but not all books are lendable and books can only be loaned out once. At least you don't have to bug the person to return them. It happens automatically. Also, most public libraries can lend out e-books but -- just as with physical books -- there is a limited number of copies.

I definitely don't miss CDs. It's so much easier to play a song or an album on a digital device than to fetch a physical disc. Ditto for DVDs. It's much easier to call up a movie from a screen than having to manage plastic discs.

And while I have no nostalgia for videocassettes or audiocassettes, I do have a soft spot for LPs. Some say they have a warmer sound, but what I mostly like about LPs is the covers and the ritual of carefully placing them on the turntable and lovingly returning them to their sleeves. And there is nothing like flipping through those old album covers for a trip down memory lane. A few years ago, my son bought my wife a turntable with a USB port that plays records and allows you to copy them to a PC, but I have no desire to make digital copies of my LPs. It kind of defeats the purpose.

I do think there will come a time when we won't easily be able judge a friend by his book covers, but somehow society will endure. Maybe we'll have to settle for talking to people to find out what interests them or, perhaps, someone will create "an app for that."

This article first appeared in the San Jose Mercury News

 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
steve12
07:13 PM on 07/08/2012
I think Microsoft's Surface technology might be an excellent platform for the development of a virtual bookshelf, that would either be integrated into a coffee table or on a wall, showing the complete digital music, video and book library of the occupant. If someone is interested that looked at it, the viewer would be able to view or play a portion on the work or interface with it on their smartphone or tablet.

Congress needs to update patent and copyright law to make it easier to legally borrow a book, song or video. If someone asked to borrow the title, it would no longer be available to the occupant to view or play, just as in the analog world. Also, the loan could be for a set time period of 7 days and could be renewed for up to 14 days by the occupant. After the loan period, it would no longer be playable on the borrow's device, but would have a means to purchase a legal copy from a variety of legal sources.

This would benefit the original owner of the work, the seller and the purchaser.
10:13 AM on 07/06/2012
I hope this isn't for another decade. We will be lacking the feeling for physical objects such as books and dvd's.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Snmartinez
08:46 AM on 07/06/2012
I'm a little sad. I have a storage unit packed with all my college books, favorite books, books from childhood, and books I've received as gifts. I can't imagine emptying it out but I realize that I am only keeping the books for sentimental value as I've read them too many times before. I don't think I'll be buying online books anytime soon though... that's just not for me.
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BlackJAC
It's better to be a black king than a white knight
05:55 PM on 07/05/2012
Something that costs $8 retail will somehow become an "expensive luxury item" while a $100+ electronic device will be cheap and commonplace?  Exactly which parallel universe did I just step into?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
inkongirl
01:46 PM on 07/05/2012
I was really resistant to getting a Kindle, but I like being able to get sample chapters and then downloading the book if I like it. I've spent half the summer reading $3 trash reads. It's great!
And I love having a turntable. How else can I enjoy all the jazz records that used to belong to my dad?
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BlackJAC
It's better to be a black king than a white knight
05:56 PM on 07/05/2012
I like being able to thumb through the entire book rather than be handed a select few pages and be told that I gotta pay to see more.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jaredbrain
10:46 AM on 07/05/2012
When I travel I do download to my ipad and take that instead of luging around a bunch of paperbacks, but otherwise I want a printed version that I can have a tangible copy of.
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Anella Harmeyer
Far left leaning Democrat. Strong believer in huma
08:50 AM on 07/05/2012
I won't own an ereader until the last physical book is sold. Nothing can replace the feel, the smell of a book and if you've convinced yourself otherwise you're doing yourself a great disservice.
01:05 PM on 07/05/2012
I agree wholeheartedly. There are some things that electronic devices do well, but I can't read for long from an illuminated screen.

Our local library is becoming a just a service center—keeping most of the books at a central location that you can request online—allowing very little shelf space for books at each branch. One of the joys of reading is the ability to browse the shelves, pull out a book and thumb through it. I'm not a luddite, just someone who doesn't want to be robbed of, what is for me, one of life's great pleasures.
06:15 PM on 07/05/2012
"There are some things that electronic devices do well, but I can't read for long from an illuminated screen."

Eink screens (Kindle, Nook, Sony) are not backlit like lcd screens (think iPad, Nook Color) and mimic a physical book (hence why they can be read in bright sun without any glare).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Anella Harmeyer
Far left leaning Democrat. Strong believer in huma
09:36 AM on 07/07/2012
Exactly. I've found many books that I never would have discovered just by wondering around a bookstore or library. So sorry to hear about your library. Mine houses the second largest genealogy library in the country and our community really takes pride in it so we're pretty lucky in that regard.
06:14 PM on 07/05/2012
I don't think I'm doing myself a disservice at all, especially when I can read a tomb of a book (think Stephen King) one handed on a crowded NYC subway.

Books are about the words, not the medium in which the words are held. I'm quite sure I get the same enjoyment as you. And, no, I've never ever once purposely smelled a book or enjoyed the smell (especially those from a library).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Anella Harmeyer
Far left leaning Democrat. Strong believer in huma
09:39 AM on 07/07/2012
Then I say you're missing out. Might I suggest walking into a bookstore, closing your eyes and inhaling deeply? I don't begrudge anyone reading with an ereader. Any reading at all is encouraged by me. Just don't take away the medium that I, and still so many others, love. We love it deeply.
06:55 AM on 07/05/2012
I think that Larry is right about what will happen but wrong about the time frame. I am twenty one years old and with the exception of text books and year books I do not own one physical book. There is just no need to have extra stuff cluttering my life especially during college and at the end of the day digital books are much easier and more convenient than physical books. But I can see how it would be difficult for people who enjoy reading and have extensive book collections to want to make the switch to digital so I think it for the most part will be a generational thing. As for CDs and DVDs I don't ever want to own any of them again the last CD I bought was in 8th or 9th grade then I got my Zune (yeah I know). Never purchased physical music again.
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TheBaffler
a long the riverrun
02:10 AM on 07/05/2012
Digital media may be the norm for the indiscriminate masses who treat art as something disposable, but serious readers and lovers of music will always provide a market for physical media.
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kinogod
word farmer
12:05 AM on 07/05/2012
Cloudy.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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waldopepper
I'd tell you all about me if you were my friend.
11:29 PM on 07/04/2012
You can have my physical books when you pry them from my cold dead hands.
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Anella Harmeyer
Far left leaning Democrat. Strong believer in huma
08:47 AM on 07/05/2012
Amen.
01:06 PM on 07/05/2012
Seriously! Sure, e-readers are great when the power goes out, but who on earth is going to risk their e-reader at the beach or pool side? Also, there is nothing more annoying then being in "the good bit" of a book and having your low battery alarm go off. I'm sure its just my own penny pinching personality, but why would I spend $10.00 on an 'ebook when I can purchase a physical book used for a lower price? As a lifetime voracious reader, I opine that while many books will only be e-published in the future, for true book lovers, nothing will ever replace a physical book!
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steve12
07:20 PM on 07/08/2012
Forever is a very long time. Wireless power will become a reality in a few years - perhaps eliminating the need to ever charge a Kindle or iPad like device.
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Sister123
I'm not the NRA, and I vote, too!
11:25 PM on 07/04/2012
@15 years ago I told my doctor, a book collector, that some day in our lifetime, books as we know them would be no more. He pooh poohed me. I think I'll have the last word on that score, but I take no satisfaction in the thought. I can't imagine my home without a wall of books. I have few possessions that I take pride in as much as my book collection, carefully arranged according to genre. My books are an integral part of my decor. Although I have embraced other forms of technology, a Kindle just wouldn't be the same.
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MichaelAKD
Be the change you wish to see in the world.
09:29 PM on 07/04/2012
we take so much for granted, too much. in the face for example of the wicked storms which left millions without power on the east coast a few days ago, i think that event helps to make evident the value of books and information stored in a format less vulnerable to "events" natural or man made. books can last exceedingly long, just look to the dead sea scrolls. it isn't only disasters to be worried about but also format. remember the big tape reels they used to have for data, ones like the census bureau used until recently. how common is equipment which can still read that information? look to the the big floppys that for the 80's and 90's most everything was stored on, now who has a floppy reader? the one thing books have over all other data storage and transfer forms is that it takes but human eyes to decode and make use of information saved that way, no need for additional equipment or technology. i think duplication of that material from text to silicon et al is a good and useful but as they say don't put all your eggs in one basket. imagine a single e.m. pulse, again man made or natural same consequences the books, they would survive other means not likely. books are insurance for the future and imho of critical importance.
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Nelson Jacobsen
been online for a long, long time
06:28 PM on 07/04/2012
Love to break it to you Larry, the CD is still over 60 percent of the music sold Nielson/Soundscan http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20120105005547/en/Nielsen-Company-Billboard%E2%80%99s-2011-Music-Industry-Report

And US publishers in the Trade sector (fiction and non-fiction for adults and children) have seen significant sales increases worldwide in both print and e-format English-language books in the past year. http://publishers.org/press/68/

As for what you see on shelves might it be just the company you keep. Here's some easy numbers world wide digital sales of music are 1.6 billion the US music market is $10 billion with worldwide sales of $24 billion .

And a quick glace at Census data shows that the US is actually moving towards being a net importer of music. Which means that we'll bring more CD to our shores then we export abroad and that is a story that no one is talking about as it don't not fit into the narrative of the digital only crowd.
06:03 PM on 07/04/2012
You can find out tons of stuff about people by looking at their Facebook page.