payn
Glory to Marik
Yeap, I was one of the initial sub skeptics when its popularity arose. I find myself consuming actually much more of...everything for much less than ever before. Folks often talk about losing content, but I can hardly recall it ever happening. I got three sleeved books with hundreds of burned DVDs cant remember the last time I even put one in a player. Shelves with books that im never going to read again. If I did want to, id probably just get an ereader copy anyways as I can barely read physical books anymore.I like bookstores. I have a shelf of vintage books in my classroom. Sometimes I just like a physical book (the new Monsetrr Manual, for example). I think if you completely prefer physical books and like having a library, there isn't much of a question about eReaders.
By and large, though, I see licensing as a feature, not a flaw, and while I understand how others feel completely the opposite, I mention this just to point out that it is not intrinsically bad or predatory. There are some pretty good rationales from my perspective: the switch to licensed, streamed content has given me access to much more content for much less money, and I don't have to fill up my living space with storage and leave behind a ton of stuff for my kid to deal with, not to mention the environmental impact. I read 10-20 books/month, so for me the savings alone are enormous.
I, for one, have welcomed our new digital subscription overlords.