Dinkeldog said:
Petri and RCanning, I think with your obsolescence arguments that you're forgetting the people behind the RPGs. We all know Monte, Fiery James and MikeMearls, for example, to some extent because they post here at least semi-regularly. These aren't the type of people that regularly go out of their way to hurt people because they can or to make a couple extra bucks. If this were an issue involving major corporations I might have different concerns, but within the RPG community, I've got very, very few.
I agree with you, I don't think the RPG industry is one where this is going to be something we have to worry about right now. But I don't know what is going to happen in the future, if I did, I would be a richer.
I did a lot of reading on Planned Obsolescence last night before going to bed. I had always only been for mechanical things, not for things like books. However, now, through the use of eBooks it is starting to happen.
Technology workers are already talking about develloping a book of hundreds of LCD screens, thin as paper, so that you can set it to work like a book, but load up the book you want. Think about your entire RPG library in one small book, where you can write on the pages, and then undo the writing later (and then bring it up again), and have thousands of books with you all the time, able to thumb through them like print. This is what they are working on.
The first time I heard this I though "Wow, that is going to be great." But now I know that they will use DRM for all of this. By the time it is there, internet connections and wireless will be the norm, so when they say "you have to be online for the book to load" people will go "That is annoying" but they will live with it. After all, it won't really effect them.
DRM = Digital Rights Management. They are boldly stating that they are going to control your Digital Rights, they are not letting you manage what you have bought, it will be completely their decision as to how it can be used, and when, and by whom, and for how long. That is what management is all about.
Large publishers (I am not talking RPG here - but more academic textbooks and encyclopedia publishers) must be frothing at the mouth about the concept of being able to expire their books when a new version comes out. Companies like Microsoft are already designing an expiration date into their OSes, where you have to pay to upgrade, or stop using all of your products. They are also dealing with hardware vendors so that you can only used approved and live software, so that you are forced to upgrade again.
With all of this it will be so simple to go to your bookshelf one day and find that some of your books are blank, and you are forced to purchase a new version.
This is something I am writing up for submission to a few people, not just about RPG (in fact I probably wont mention RPGs in the piece at all), but it will be something I am going to worry about.
Anyway, I have been awake about 10 minutes, and need a shower.
Richard Canning