Reading is a recent development for me in the grand scheme of things, dyslexia meant I was hindered till I was about 18, picking up my first actual book 1984 at the age of 24.

10 years later I read roughly 3 books a year.

Currently reading Manufacturing Consent and whilst I knew news media is often misleading, to what extent was not clear sadly I now know the extent.

I’d like to have a conversation about Manufacturing Consent and what people have come away with. Other books too like Bullshit Jobs and Ordinary Men were big shift for my world view, so talking about and recommendations of similar books as well please.

  • squid_slime@lemm.eeOP
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    6 months ago

    How so? Is the online text as good as what you’d found in books or is it fodder?

    • tal@lemmy.today
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      6 months ago

      Eh, in some ways worse, in some better.

      Books have kind of an emphasis on a linear format, and hypertext can be convenient, especially for reference use, and you can’t do that in a book. Searchability is nice.

      On the other hand, the ownership model of books is handy – buy it and keep it. Ebooks are the closest equivalent and I wouldn’t bet on an eBook being usable 30 years down the line.

      There’s some content that I can only get in physical books (or at most, ebooks), though.

      I still do buy physical books. I’m currently going through a book on the history of military submarines, and last week bought a book on a particular period in US war planning. But the proportion of text I read in pixels is way up, and the proportion that I read on the Web is way up.