I bought one.
And I'm very impressed by and happy with it. A few of my
technically-minded friends have remarked critically, merely on a
conceptual basis, but those who have actually seen it (especially the
`normal people') have responded very positively.
I was sort-of thinking of the device like one of these
`electronic travel guide' things, e.g.:
... except that it's far more expansive and generally-applicable, so I
might find myself pulling it out and looking things up in response to
something I hear on the radio, or when I'm trying to figure out what
kind of hammer I need at Home Depot (that was embarassing...).
It'd probably also make a nice museum-going companion. And if it could
also hold a copy of Wiktionary (or some other dictionary), then that'd
be pretty awesome.
But it's really not evident just how profound the device is until you
find yourself amongst friends who are trying to remember the details
of something of which you've never even heard, and then suddenly
`you're the expert' in the group.
My first such experience involved a couple of friends who were trying
to make sense of their vague memories of `trying to read' Nikolai
Gogol's book, `Dead Souls'..., and there it was in my WikiReader!
Suddenly I was an expert (the designated expert) on the book. The
big question was, `what was the point of the protagonist's scheme to
buy already-dead serfs who counted as taxable property for him?'; the
answer was `he was going to retire by mortgaging them'.
My wife and I received a `this is what the mercaptan additive in
Natural gas smells like' scratch-and-sniff note in the mail from the
local gas-supply company, the other day, and I was able to instantly
start a conversation with my wife, in our kitchen, about the history
behind these odour-additives (which turns out to be quite an amazing
story, actually).
We're having amazing experiences like this semi-regularly, thanks to
this device.
People do say `$100 seems a little expensive', but then they
concede that maybe it isn't so expensive when reminded that
just the 8-GB micro-SD card (included with the WikiReader) would,
by itself, retail for as much as $50; and I note that more simplistic
devices than the WikiReader--many in the same best-seller list on
Amazon,
such as the Scrabble-dictionary--also sell for $50+....
After actually having the profoundly-wowing `instant expert'
experience a few times, it becomes easy to accept the device
as being worth $100, even though it's terribly difficult to
`just explain it' to someone who already has a perspective like
`well, I already have a $500 device with a $100-per-month
subscription and a favourable (and mostly fixed) location that alows
me to be connected to the Internet all the time, and anything that
doesn't provide wireless real-time updates and news with updated
charts, graphs, and other pictures... has all the appeal of the Pet
Rock'.
Now I'm just wondering... why I can't actually find much in the way of
traditional(?) electronic travel-guides--there's just that
`travelmaster' one, and it took me ages to find even that.
Weird--I could've sworn that I'd actually seen them somewhere (else)
before I went looking.
I guess I should post this all on Amazon's WikiReader review-page....
[Reply]
|