>i expect that i will be able to load .epubs onto the thing
quite easily, simply by going through the itunes store...
Do me a favor and see what you can do with it using wifi and without
feeding Apple your credit card number, nor signing up for one of the “Company
Store” accounts: aka iTunes, iBooks, nor the App Store. In my experience
it is a “boat anchor” as far as reading books are concerned until one
feeds Apple one’s credit card number – one can however “read
online web connected” in txt or pdf format using the included “Safari”
stateless web browser – “stateless” meaning that the browser
only remembers the latest txt or pdf one has read, one cannot use the web browser
to save more than one “favorite” book and then come back and read
it successfully later – unless one has an active wifi or 3G connection,
or unless that’s the last book read. But maybe you can figure out some
tricks that I haven’t been able to figure out re avoiding “The
Company Store!”
Also, see if you can figure out any way to load epub books from
the PG site directly, via wifi, and without using a USB cable, nor by going
through The Company Store. I haven’t been able to figure out any way to
use wifi to directly load a free epub book from an internet location of my
choosing (such as directly from PG)
>and if people ask me why _you_ had problems doing it,
i'll shrug _my_ shoulders, and mumble something about
Again, *I* want to read what I want to read and where I
want to read it from. And if *I* pay for wifi then I’d like
to be able to use that wifi to do this--god forbid! What I consistently
see is a pattern of the makers of ebook readers crippling the use of wifi to
keep the user from acquiring and reading books from wherever they want to get
those books. What I see is the makers only really allowing the wifi to be
used to acquire books and documents when purchasing from the official company
store (or licensee) of that maker.
Also, *I* want to be able to take a non-DRM aka “Free”
book off my machine and give it to a friend and have that friend be able to
read that “Free” book. I also want to be able to create books, and
applications, and freely share those books and applications with my friends,
and not have to ask The Corporation’s permission to share my creations,
nor have The Corporation limit my distribution to only my 100 closest
friends. In short I would like to retain my first amendment rights, and
not flush them down the toilet with my choice of reader machine. I would also
like to retain my freedom of political expression in these matters, and not
have The Corporation decide what political speech they will allow on my
machine, nor what political speech I can choose to distribute, etc. And I would
like to be able to use wifi to do these things, not just a USB umbilical cord.
Again, netbooks already allow me to do all these things, so it
is not like I am asking for anything that is technically impossible, nor
anything that keeps one or another ebook maker from earning an honest buck, its
just that the packaging of the keyboard with the netbook is an awkward
packaging choice for an “ebook reader” IMHO. And the Toshiba
Portege already allows all these things without a keyboard and with a
touchscreen display, its just that it’s a bit heavy and a *bit* expensive
at $1500 bucks! But I will happily put up with a netbook’s limitation
rather than have The Corporation tell me what I am allowed to read and from where!
And it doesn’t matter WHO “The Corporation” is!