02-25-2010, 10:43 AM | #181 |
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Let's see.. If I had purchased PDF with DRM from Amazon (when they sold them) and had them backed up, the backup would right now be 100% useless as there is no way I can strip the DRM or have a program to be able to view those files due to the DRM. So sometimes DRM can make backups useless. But these days since we can strip DRM, backups will be better then the originals.
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02-25-2010, 11:17 AM | #182 | |
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02-25-2010, 11:19 AM | #183 |
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DRM prevents you from making a backup that you you can 100% reliably say you will be able to use should you need to restore it sometime in the future.
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02-25-2010, 01:39 PM | #184 |
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PKFFW -
No, there are files which are useful backups and there are files which are not. DRM outside your control means it's not a useful backup. It's precisely the same issue. Simply copying media does not mean you've necessarily made a backup... Your constant accusations I'm morally wrong are amusing and typical... Last edited by DawnFalcon; 02-25-2010 at 02:25 PM. |
02-25-2010, 02:23 PM | #185 | ||
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What you're talking about with fonts and CSS is perfectly possible for ePub - and the more advanced renderers such as Bookworm do that and more (MathML, embedded video, etc.) Quote:
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02-25-2010, 04:31 PM | #186 | ||||
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The only point of reflowing is to be able to get the font, font-size, etc., and other layout features you prefer from the same source. You can take that source and create a PDF that has all the desired features you wish, plus additional features that are impossible display on an ePub on most devices. . Once the PDF already has your preferred layout, what would be the point of reflow? So, again, my conclusion is that I'd rather acquire ePub than PDF, but I'd rather read PDF than ePub right now. (Of course, I'd really rather be given LaTeX source, but HTML-based source, like that found in ePub, is almost as good.) So again, my conclusion is that PDF is currently better for reading than ePub. Last edited by frabjous; 02-25-2010 at 05:01 PM. |
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02-25-2010, 04:48 PM | #187 | ||
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If you re-read my posts I'm sure you will agree I have not accused you of anything. Cheers, PKFFW |
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02-25-2010, 05:10 PM | #188 | |
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"Potentially a backup" | Backup. S'all. (Also, you're quite wrong - example: One Time Pads. Immune to "breaking" when used correctly) |
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02-25-2010, 06:58 PM | #189 |
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Typography (pdf, latex) is important only when you want to print something on fixed sized paper.
If you want to view it on a screen it is counter-productive, since pages are meaningless on a screen, and screen sizes vary. For screens the HTML format is much better. Therefore, epub will definitely win. |
02-25-2010, 07:28 PM | #190 | |
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02-25-2010, 07:33 PM | #191 | |
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But some standard location system would work. The Kindle has that, each "page" on the screen will have say location 678-675. You type in select go to location 678 and it will take you to that sport regardless of font size whether you're on a Kindle 1/2 or the DX with it's bigger screen etc. We will need something like that for citing purposes etc. But at the same time, reflowing text doesn't work well for academic books (research findings, not textbooks--though it sucks for those too), journal articles etc. as text needs to be around certain figures, tables can't be broken up etc. So for that realm I'm hoping we get some A4 sized readers and that becomes the standard for academic documents (A4 or smaller) and devices meant to read them (A4 screen or larger) so reflow isn't an issues. And stuff can just be displayed with the original pagination etc. The documents may change in the future, but that doesn't change the fact of having 100+ years (depending on field) of research articles us academics need to read and be able to properly site. So an A4 screen is a major want for me. |
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02-25-2010, 07:45 PM | #192 |
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"Pages" in epub are always the same regardless of display/flow that's one of it's advantages to me.
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02-25-2010, 11:52 PM | #193 | ||
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We have YouTube now, so what's with all this industry trying to make high quality movies and TV shows? Don't they know that's not necessary anymore? (Geez. Not to mention that e-Ink readers do display one page at a time, so page-typography is relevant to them.) Quote:
Such claims are only made by people who are completely ignorant of one side of the argument. I know both HTML and LaTeX mark-ups; they're barely different. The latter is just a little easier to read, and more powerful. (Though the tide is shifting.) HTML is in some ways more convenient to parse, and is a little more consistent in its syntax, at least if it conforms to XHTML guidelines. The real difference is not so much in the mark-up languages but the fact that there is already a typographically rich renderer for one, though it could be adapted to use the other's mark-up easily enough. In fact, there are LaTeX packages that can take (at least a subset of) HTML as input and deliver nice results, and things like Prince XML do pretty well with their own superior algorithms. In any case, I'm not saying that ePub will lose. I don't think it will. I'm saying that in the future, hopefully, the display software for ePub will give typographically pleasing results. This is important whether on real paper or virtual paper. |
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02-26-2010, 03:41 AM | #194 | |||
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As an example think of a wall in the middle of a walkway between points A and B. That wall can only stop you from travelling from point A to point B if you choose not to go around or over it but instead simply continue to walk straight into it. In the case of one choosing to simply walk into the wall and not go around or over it, the wall itself isn't stopping the person from reaching point B it is their choice not to go around it that is stopping them. Quote:
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Cheers, PKFFW |
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02-26-2010, 05:28 AM | #195 | |||
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I don't see how this is relevant to DRM, however, because the way in which DRM is cracked is typically not by cracking the encryption, but by getting the user to provide the key, and decrypting in just the same way that the legitimate software being cracked does it. Even if there was a "one time pad" mechanism (which seems unlikely ever to be practical for a mass market), you could circumvent the DRM by applying the data in the same way that the legitimate software does. In short, the reason that DRM can typically be bypassed is that it must be bypassed in order to give any access to the content at all. Whatever lock they put on the data, they must also provide the key - and this is their undoing. |
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