Lumenlog.

Category: Book

2011

Our Choice

Das erste "Multimedia-Buch" das mir wirklich gut gefällt. Ich bin gerade erst mit dem zweiten Kapitel fertig, aber beeindruckt von der Qualität des Interaktionsdesigns, der Typographie, den Bildern und dem Konzept. Inhalt? Interessant, bis jetzt wenig wirklich neues, aber gut und eindringlich formuliert. The first interactive, multi-media book that I like. The interaction design is stunningly well done, the typography is more than bearable, the combination of text, pictures, videos and infographics works and above all, it's actually fun to read. The content? Good so far, nothing particularly new. The subject is as important as ever.

2010

An Experiment in Reading

I don't really like e-books. So, when Stephen Fry announced that his autobiography "The Fry Chronicles" was to be released as an iPhone app, I couldn't have been less enthusiastic. Of course, me being the novelty-seeking geek I am, I still couldn't help tapping on the link. I was intrigued enough by the flowery wheel and the prospect of non-linear reading to, after a few days of putting it off, buy the app.

myFry.app is an experiment in reading: The book is split up in 162 shortish "chunks" rather than chapters which are tagged with names of people, themes or places. Those chunks can be accessed by turning the dial on the wheel, tapping and then holding on the screen. The app encourages the reader to follow tags rather than time, to read the book not sequentially, but randomly.

So there I was, playing around with the wheel, finding its behaviour profoundly confusing. I finally managed to start reading the first chunk. Soon, rather than exploring the book through tags, I found myself reading it in the most boring, unexciting, least modern fashion possible: from beginning to end. Somewhere, a clever visionary weeps as I ignore the endless possibilities of tags, touch and technology.


The Book

It is an enjoyable book, full of wit, wisdom and if I write one more of those terrible three-part alliterations I'm gonna throw this computer out of the window. Where was I? Ah, the book. It's good, go read it. Stephen has an interesting life that I enjoy reading about. British universities, the comedy and drama scene, and most of all his insightful, self-deprecating honesty make it a great read.

The App

What I don't particularly care for, though, is the app itself. I have no terribly big complaints, don't get me wrong. The text is laid out nicely, the tags might come in useful if I re-read the book at a later time and it hasn't crashed yet. It works. What it doesn't do, however, is change the way I read. Call me old-fashioned and boring, but I enjoy watching a narrative unfold as I read from first to last page. How am I supposed to understand a chapter on Stephen's work at the BBC if I don't know how he got there? And who, on Earth, is this Kim?

It is reading the book in a linear way that the app makes harder than it should. There is no easy way to just jump to the next chunk, I always need to fiddle around with the wheel. Distracting. Fixing that would be easy, I simply need some navigation at the bottom of the chunks. One button labelled "next part" would be enough. Trying out new ways of reading is great, but it shouldn't degrade the "usual" reading experience for no reason.

Other than that, reading in the app is quite pleasant. It looks great, a lot like Plain Text, the app I use for writing these words in a terribly crowded train on a Saturday morning. The chunks are small enough for very short reading sessions. Instead of checking Twitter at the bus stop, I simply read a part of the book, often receiving strange looks as I chuckled at one of Stephen's jokes. Watching the wheel navigation slowly fill up with chunks marked as read is gratifying in the same way as seeing a bookmark slowly wander from top to bottom is. It's a great visualisation of reading progress.

So...

In the end, the decision whether to buy Stephen's book in paper or app form is a matter of taste, not of technology. It certainly is a great book and deserves being consumed in any form. Wow. That kind of made me want to buy the audio book as well.

Wundert euch nicht über das Englisch hier. Ich hatte einfach mal Lust, wieder einen Artikel in dieser Sprache zu schreiben. ;-)

The Future of the Book

... wie man sie sich bei IDEO vorstellt. Interessant auf jeden Fall. "Nelson" erscheint mir etwas zu sehr von der Diskussionswilligkeit aller Leser auszugehen. "Coupland" ist eine tolle Idee und "Alice" finde ich großartig. ...as IDEO sees it. Those are pretty awesome ideas. I'm not sure about "Nelson", though. It seems to be just a tad overconfident in the readers' willingness to actually discuss.

Oh. You made it all the way down here. Congratulations, you seem to be liking this so far. :) Time to get acquainted. I'm Marcel, this is where I put stuff on the internet. You can follow me on Twitter, read the about page (if you're into that sort of thing) or just explore this blog. Have fun & thanks for stopping by!

Du hast es bis hier unten geschafft. Bravo, irgendwas mache ich wohl richtig. ;) Ich bin übrigens Marcel, hier schreibe ich über Sachen, die ich interessant finde. Du kannst mir auch auf Twitter folgen, oder mir beim Retinacast dabei zuhören, wie ich mich mit anderen über Serien unterhalte. Oder dich einfach weiter umschauen. Viel Spaß!

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