I’ve had this post by Janet Reid on the “Hey, There’s a Dead Guy in the Living Room” blog (link) open for six days now with the intention of posting about it here. Janet’s post speculates on how book buying might be different five years from now, and much of it is interesting, but not of much interest to me:
…you’ll walk into a bookstore and see shelves of books, face out. You’ll see video screens above the shelves. You’ll hold the book up to the screen and a menu about that book will pop up. Author interview, book trailer, other books by the author, blurbs about the books, maybe a couple minutes of the author reading from the book.
Five years from now I’ll probably be walking around with a device even more awesome than the upcoming second generation iPhone, and I’m already planning on being able to use this second generation iPhone—especially once AT&T works out the kinks in their “free wi-fi to AT&T iPhone users in Starbucks and Barnes & Noble” dealio—to pull up Amazon reviews, etc., etc., on my phone while I’m standing there in the store (and at the same time see how much cheaper it would be to just go ahead and order it online and wait two days for it to show up at my door—sorry B&N).
What I am interested in, though, is Janet’s “bookspresso machine:”
…if you decide to buy a book, you’ll take it to the register. The clerk will scan the barcode. Then she’ll keep the book and hand you a receipt…. In ten minutes your book will arrive from the basement where it was freshly printed on a bookspresso machine. Maybe it’s delivered to you in the coffee shop. Maybe it’s waiting for pickup after you shop at other stores in the mall.
OMG THIS WOULD BE SO COOL!!! I could order a book then enjoy a cup of coffee (and the requisite fattening pastry to wash it down with) while I wait.
What would be even cooler would be to not end up with a physical book at all—I want something I can read on my iPhone, or whatever awesome device I’m carrying around five years from now—but I get that others get a kick out of the actuality of printed-on-paper books. The bookspresso machine sounds like a great way to make the printed book business a little greener, which I’m all for, and hey, I’d totally use it for gifting books to people.
And while I’m on the subject of bookmaking—learn how you can become your very own bookspresso machine at The Anatomy of a Book. (I wish I were patient and detail-oriented enough to do this sort of thing. Unfortunately what I’d end up with would look more like an eighth-grader’s rushed school project, done while eating a messy peanut butter and jelly sandwich and with one hand in a cast.)
And while I’m on the subject of the upcoming new iPhone…OMG CAN IT BE JUNE 9TH NAO?!?