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Update to “The Blockbuster Video model for college text books”

In the prior post, we wrote “With products like the Amazon Kindle now commercially viable, it’s questionable whether students will be using ‘hard copy’ textbooks at all five years from now. Given the expense of printing, the short time horizon of use, and, frankly, the sheer weight of most textbooks that college kids have to lug around, moving all college texts to digital editions makes a lot more sense over the long run.”

Today in the Wall Street Journal, we see that the long-term may be coming even sooner than we thought: “Amazon’s Kindle to Sell Law Books.”

This is only the beginning, of course.  But consider the potential: practicing lawyers and law students alike can now potentially kiss the late nights at the law library goodbye.  They could instead carry the entire thing with them in their briefcase.  The ease of indexing, bookmarking, and flipping back and forth between text and footnotes make it all the more compelling.And why stop at law books?  Surely doctors and CPAs could benefit from having their medical reference books and tax volumes  on the Kindle.

At any rate, change is coming, and it’s coming even faster than we thought!

Charles Sizemore, CFA

Co-author of the recently-published Boom or Bust: Understanding and Profiting from a Changing Consumer Economy

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Discussion

2 comments for “Update to “The Blockbuster Video model for college text books””

  1. I am a faculty member at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. I have evaluated the Kindle’s specifications, and that of other reading devices. I think they are close, but not quite there yet as a textbook substitute. These devices still need:
    1. High quality color support, esp. for graphics.
    2. Ability to connect an external monitor to enlarge the display to see complicated graphs, tables, etc.
    3. Better ability to bookmark or highlight (Kindle has very limited ability - there is a finite number of sections that can be highlighted, for instance).
    4. Ext. SD card slot
    5. Improved sync with computer files and full (not limited) support for PDF files (right now PDF support is typically limited).
    6. Improved search functions
    7. Better ways to copy/paste between content and a student-written report/citation.
    So, while I agree that we are heading in the direction of electronic textbooks, we are not there yet, in my opinion.

    Posted by RonWalkr | July 13, 2009, 12:26 pm
  2. Ronald, I would agree completely. It’s fine for certain subjects (history, literature, law, philosophy), but for math, science,engineering, economics, medicine — subjects where diagrams are essential — it still has a long way to go. It will get there, though.

    Posted by Charles Sizemore | July 13, 2009, 1:12 pm

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