Will they please stop publishing great books!

Discussion in 'Chit Chat' started by nitro, Jun 15, 2005.

  1. hughb

    hughb

    So if you build a library of hundreds of books in the Kindle and you have a hardware malfunction that causes you to lose all of your books, do you have to buy them again?

    E-readers will become giveaways someday in the not too distant future.
     
    #201     Mar 22, 2009
  2. nitro

    nitro

    What? Zero delta.
     
    #202     Mar 23, 2009
  3. nitro

    nitro

    Agreed, or even better, books I have already bought from anyone.
     
    #203     Mar 23, 2009
  4. nitro

    nitro

    I don't know how this works and is a good question.
     
    #204     Mar 23, 2009

  5. :) No, I was thinking secondary market.
     
    #205     Mar 23, 2009
  6. nitro

    nitro

    The Mystery of the Missing Antimatter (Science Essentials) (Hardcover)
    by Helen R. Quinn (Author), Yossi Nir (Author)

    http://www.amazon.com/Mystery-Missi...bs_sr_7?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1238332411&sr=8-7

    Antimatter (Hardcover)
    by Frank Close (Author)

    http://www.amazon.com/Antimatter-Fr...bs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1238332411&sr=8-1

    The Quinn/Nir book is outstanding. The effort that they put in explaining the subject is remarkable. This is layman science witting at the perfect level. It should be the standard by which science books are measured.

    The Close book is a very quick read and together with the other book gives you a solid [laymans] grounding in understanding on one of the deepest mysteries in nature. It is more mathematical.

    Both are must owns in a science library.
     
    #206     Mar 29, 2009
  7. nitro

    nitro

    Well, I guess this could work if somehow two kindles could talk to each other, and there was some mechanism to guarantee removal of the originating eBook. But this would also solve the "lending a kindle book" problem, so not sure what the issue is at Amazon.
     
    #207     Mar 29, 2009
  8. #208     Mar 29, 2009
  9. #209     Mar 29, 2009
  10. nitro

    nitro

    This has to be the strangest book I have ever seen written on the history of mathematics. I perused through it at Borders last night:

    Naming Infinity: A True Story of Religious Mysticism and Mathematical Creativity (Belknap Press) (Hardcover)

    http://www.amazon.com/Naming-Infini...bs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1238601408&sr=8-1

    It is not so much that mysticism is related to mathematics that makes it strange to me. There are lots of examples of that in the entire history of mathematics. What is strange is that repeatedly "Name Worshiping" can put the human mind in a state where creativity is highly enhanced.

    Strange....But still worth a look.
     
    #210     Apr 1, 2009