I am of the understanding that buying books online is hardly worth anything because you don’t actually own anything. Maybe you own the digital file? I’m not sure. I don’t trust the longevity of it, though.

I’m told a lot (mainly by my Dad) that its a good idea to print those out to keep them. However, I’m talking about books that are easily 200+ pages.

I don’t know if its worth the ink or money to print them out. At that point would it be better to just buy a book?

  • Smart_Bandicoot9609@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Do you actually own anything when you go on vacation? You don’t. You pay for the experience. It’s the same thing more or less with books. You don’t pay for the physical copy but for what’s inside. The ideas of the author. The experience of reading it. It doesn’t matter if you have a physical or a digital copy. It’s exactly the same.

  • Aggressive_Towels@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I’ve read a few short novellas that you can’t get physical copies of. Printed them out at work when I was alone in the office lol. Bound them and have them on my shelf now.

    Worth it for me in this case but in almost any other scenario just buy the book. Buy used if you want to safe money.

  • wc10888@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Perhaps get a digital edition, and if you really liked it, seek out a physical copy to keep.

    There are copyright concerns reproducing or printing a book out. I don’t think “fair use” applies

  • LaunchTransient@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    It really depends on what you mean by “worth it”.
    When you start getting into the large page number range, the cost of printing starts to approach that of just buying the book outright.
    On top of this you have bindings - they aren’t just pretty things for show, they preserve the book and increase its longevity in use.

    There’s a reason why paperbacks are often referred to as “battered”. Loose leaves of text will have an even shorter lifespan and are prone to getting lost or torn.
    You can get your printed pages bound, but then that adds extra cost, and by that point you may as well buy the book outright.

    Digital libraries are great for compactness and accessibility, but if you want durable, physical hardcopies, you may as well just buy them. Secondhand if you can, if cost is a real concern.

  • darkbloo64@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I wouldn’t waste the paper and ink. Make sure your digital files are accessible (ie, DRM-free and in a common format) and backed up in several locations, and that’s about as much of a guarantee you can get for them.

    • viveleramen_@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      Sure, but there are plenty of ebooks, web fiction, fan fiction, fan-translated works that are unlikely to get an official release, extra chapters/short stories that were only published in an obscure magazine and/or on Twitter, etc that just aren’t available in a physical format. I’ve considered getting into bookbinding for precisely this reason, but I’m not sure where to even start.

  • No_Instance18@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Definitely buy the book at that point. Also, some of those books have software that prevents printing.

    Edit: Certain sellers such as Amazon are only selling you access to the file, not ownership itself.

  • ficskala@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I don’t trust the longevity of it, though.

    I’d def trust more a digital compy than a physical one, you can always copy over a file, buying a whole new book can be pricy, especially for books that aren’t really too common, as long as you’re mindful of your data, it’s better digital

  • withygoldfish@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Big fan of ‘personal collections’ over here. No disrespect meant to ppl who love their public libraries or school libraries (I do too)! But I have a few articles from scholars comparing differences between public resources (national musuems, public libraries, even subscription models like Netflix etc.)vs private collections and I prefer owning. Just my preference.

  • Most_Tadpole9501@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    What?

    Just buy the real copy wtf is this question lol I feel like your dad was fucking with you. It’s such a stupid idea I can’t imagine how anyone with any sort of logic would print out an enire ebook instead of just buying the book

    • SinkPhaze@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      Hello, hi, it’s me 👋 I print out entire ebooks

      I also bind those prints in to bespoke hardcovers for my own personal shelf tho. I don’t just have binders of printed ebooks. Honestly, OPs dad sound old old. Thats the sorta thing my Grandfather would do. The piles of printed emails i had to go thru when he died. So many chain mails lol

  • albertnormandy@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Ask yourself why you need a physical copy after you’ve read it once. Some books you can come back to and reread, but all books? Not likely. Once you’ve read a book like Hunger Games who cares if 25 years from now President Bezos takes his digital copy back from you? Space in your house is finite. Don’t fill it just to fill it. Curate your books.

    • Tom_Bombadilio@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      I agree with this in principle but for me personally I have owned a tablet reader early on and tried to use it but just couldn’t read consistently. I tried again when they switched to the non glare paper white screens thinking maybe that’s what kept me from reading digital like I do paper but I still just couldn’t bring myself to read after a while. I tried to force myself to do it but I just can’t get engrossed in a digital file. I gave both of those readers away to people in the hopes that they could use them and wrote off my losses.

      I buy cheap mass market paper back books usually and store them in boxes and if I read them twice and I really like it I might switch to a hardback edition and throw them on my nice shelves. They take up space yeah but for me its a choice between buying physical books or not reading at all basically.