California Professors Unveil Proposal To Attack Asteroids With Lasers 161
from the hitch-a-ride-to-the-off-world-colonies dept.
|
|
You're have to be Bruce Wayne to afford the insurance.
-Stephen
I see nothing in the response involving a law either endorsing or persecuting the Jedi faith. You're just one of those shouty "New Sith", aren't you?
-Stephen
The tactile nature thing is entirely subjective, I agree. For flicking through and bookmarking, I do find physical books more user-friendly if I need to cross-reference several pages within a book; I can stick a bookmark (or finger) on each page and rapidly flick from one to another. That's more of a chore with an ereader. But it's personal preference, I know.
Another advantage of ebooks besides the information density that I forgot to mention in my first comment is searching. For keeping track of important or favourite passages, searching can remove the need for bookmarking if one can remember a significant word or two. And it's more useful than a physical index.
-Stephen
I live in a small flat with insufficient space to store lots of books. My Kindle solves that problem.
Reading ebooks is a completely different experience to reading paper books. I miss the tactile nature of paper books, the physical bookmarkability, and the ease of flicking through them. But the practical problem of storage space that ebooks solve is, for me, a more important consideration.
-Stephen
There's been a load of blah on Slashdot recently about some election in the colonies; turnabout is fair play
If you mash the Square button while it animates, your JavaScript runs faster!
-Stephen
The only thing I don't like about chrome is it's lack of good RSS support
I like RSS Live Links for subscribing to RSS feeds in Chrom{e,ium}. I find it to be a fine replacement for Firefox's live bookmarks. I have no idea whether it'll be any use to you, but there it is.
(I'm not associated with RSS Live Links in any way other than as a happy user).
-Stephen
"The one charm of marriage is that it makes a life of deception a neccessity." - Oscar Wilde