elf: Quote: She is too fond of books, and it has turned her brain (Fond of Books)
elf ([personal profile] elf) wrote in [community profile] ebooks2011-01-17 05:08 pm
Entry tags:

Survey saaaaays....

A poll! Because we all need more polls! Or rather, because I looked at the membership list and said, mygods, who ARE all these people, and also, I bet they'd like more ... posts about ... something ebookish.. In order to figure out what kinds of posts those should be, I bring you ... TICKY BOXES! Confirm your ebookish identity, knowledge, and DRM skills!

Poll #5653 Who are you people?
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 86


What kind of ebook person are you?

View Answers

I read ebooks
67 (77.9%)

I buy and read ebooks
58 (67.4%)

I write ebooks
6 (7.0%)

I write and sell ebooks
1 (1.2%)

I convert/reformat ebooks
49 (57.0%)

I don't write or read ebooks (yet?), but I'm interested in them
6 (7.0%)

Your ticky boxes cannot contain my ebookery
20 (23.3%)

Ticky box, ticky boox, e-tickery abounds
30 (34.9%)

If you read ebooks, what do you read them on?

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I don't read ebooks.
2 (2.4%)

Desktop computer
26 (30.6%)

Laptop or netbook.
40 (47.1%)

E-ink dedicated reader.
56 (65.9%)

LCD screen dedicated reader
1 (1.2%)

Phone or PDA
25 (29.4%)

Tablet computer
6 (7.1%)

Something else, which you have failed to describe
3 (3.5%)

TICKY OF DOOM!
21 (24.7%)

Do you have a device/ereader preference? (Or: what do you think you'd prefer, if you don't have one yet.)

View Answers

I don't read ebooks.
2 (2.3%)

I don't have a preference.
1 (1.2%)

I prefer to read on a computer
0 (0.0%)

I prefer to read on a dedicated ebook reader.
49 (57.0%)

I prefer a multifunction device (iPad, phone, etc.)
17 (19.8%)

I have different preferences in different circumstances.
16 (18.6%)

I prefer something else.
1 (1.2%)

What do you know about ebook formats?

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Ebook for mats? No, ebooks for bed, chairs, couches ...
5 (5.8%)

There's a lot of them. They're a confusing mess.
32 (37.2%)

One is better than the rest, and it's my preference.
14 (16.3%)

One is better than the rest, and I prefer something else anyway.
1 (1.2%)

They all have different pros & cons; I don't think any is best.
25 (29.1%)

I know which ones work on my ereader.
61 (70.9%)

I know which ones work on most ereaders.
36 (41.9%)

My knowledge of ebook formats exceeds your ticky-talents.
8 (9.3%)

What do you know about DRM?

View Answers

What does Dating Republican Men have to do with ebooks?
4 (4.7%)

It's evil.
42 (49.4%)

It's a way for authors to avoid getting ripped off.
12 (14.1%)

I know what kind works on my ereader.
25 (29.4%)

I know what kinds work on most ereaders.
14 (16.5%)

I know how to remove it from ebooks I buy.
14 (16.5%)

I could figure out how to remove it if I wanted/needed to.
43 (50.6%)

I have many thinky thoughts about DRM and can expound on them at length.
22 (25.9%)

It's a damned nuisance. I dunno about "evil," though.
42 (49.4%)

Tickety-tickety-tick tick tick.
29 (34.1%)

holyschist: Image of a medieval crocodile from Herodotus, eating a person, with the caption "om nom nom" (Default)

[personal profile] holyschist 2011-01-18 09:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Holy crap, I would love that--if I were going on a short trip where taking books was impractical but didn't own an ereader, or to be able to properly try out eInk before I commit to buying an ereader. I wish my library did that...I don't *think* it does.
isis: (awesome)

[personal profile] isis 2011-01-18 10:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, it's a brand-new program, just started Dec 10th. They have 6 Nooks "preloaded with bestsellers, or add titles from our downloadable services". Users need to take a short orientation before being certified to check them out. Currently they are all checked out or on the holdshelf, and there are 16 holds, so VERY popular.
holyschist: Image of a medieval crocodile from Herodotus, eating a person, with the caption "om nom nom" (Default)

[personal profile] holyschist 2011-01-19 12:43 am (UTC)(link)
Part of my reservations about getting an ereader is still that I'm not sure I'm actually willing to read whole books on one, and I don't know anyone locally who has an eInk reader they'd be willing to loan me for a few days. Being able to check one out of the library would be brilliant.

Evidently not my part of Colorado, though. :-/ (I also found out recently that the Boulder library system doesn't let you put holds on things unless you physically live in Boulder County, which I don't. That makes me grouchy.)
holyschist: Image of a medieval crocodile from Herodotus, eating a person, with the caption "om nom nom" (Default)

[personal profile] holyschist 2011-01-19 01:58 am (UTC)(link)
I am fairly confident I will not give up paper entirely--I really don't want to read in the bath on anything electronic, I definitely like paper better than eInk, and there are still a lot of advantages of paper books that make me more willing to spend money on them (plus I read a lot of heavily illustrated nonfiction that just doesn't work so well on a small screen, if it were even available digitally, which it's not). I want an ereader for some very specific purposes as a complement to my paper library, not as a replacement for it.

The problem with the idea in that thread is that I can play around with one in a store fine, but I really need to be able to borrow one for a few days, and I don't see a stranger doing that. I sure wouldn't.
holyschist: Image of a medieval crocodile from Herodotus, eating a person, with the caption "om nom nom" (Default)

[personal profile] holyschist 2011-01-19 06:17 am (UTC)(link)
The thought of trying to read a screen through a ziploc makes me rather unenthused. And, uh, a lot of my casual leisure reading is academic books.

I'm not holding my breath on the library thing; my local system doesn't even have an effective electronic reminder system; the system I actually use doesn't allow out-of-county people to put holds on books (!) so I wouldn't have a prayer of getting my hands on an ereader; the place I'm going to live for the next year is in the Middle of Nowhere and I am not optimistic about their libraries, period.

I just don't know many people offline who use ereaders, period.