I read an article in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer this morning that has me reeling with disbelief. Some dude who works at Microsoft had a brilliant idea. With Netflix, he can get just about any movie he wants within a day or two of requesting it. Why shouldn't, he wondered, he be able to do that with books! Any book you want to read should be available within a day or two of requesting it, and then, once read, you should be able to return and get another. Brilliant!
And so, being smart Microsoft guy that he is, Dustin Hubbard went and created such a place. he calls it Paperspine. Don't take my word for it... read about it here: http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/books/342386_paperspine06.html?source=rss
I'm thinking that this is indicative of Microsoft thinking. (No, this isn't a Microsoft operation, but he is a Microsoft employee.) 'Let's take something that already exists, for free, and do the same thing, but make people pay for it.'
It doesn't matter that more than 200 years ago Benjamin Franklin had the same idea except that Franklin wasn't looking at it as a profit-making scheme. And of course Franklin's idea was a rehash of ideas from other cultures.
What burns me most, though, is that people will pay for this. Pay money to borrow books! Yet most library systems could make vast improvements and offer the additional services people are looking for with just a fraction of the money Mr. Hubbard is likely to make.
Visit your local library, please.
Friday, December 07, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment