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According to the OS X dictionary a book is a physical object, so digital books aren't books. Well, the OS X desktop isn't a real desktop either.
To make it easier to talk about it I understand people call these digital publications books.
Still, I find it somewhat uneasy to refer to these as books myself. They're a bunch of multi media files connected by a menu structure that kind of mimics a books.
The books on my ereader are measured in kilo bytes, Apple's textbooks reach multi giga byte levels. That doesn't leave much room for movies.
Just had a look at the reference French dictionary out of curiosity, and the definition of "livre" (book) takes more than a page! Does not help that the word has three different meanings, I guess.
Anyway, the core definition, in the sense that we think about, is "set of written or printed sheets designed to be read". So both of our dictionaries agree that this is about the support more than the content...
Edited 2012-01-23 09:30 UTC




Member since:
2010-03-08
Let's get this straight : I agree that iBooks, as it stands, is a web page marketed as a book by Apple. However, this strange naming raises some interesting questions about the nature and becoming of books in the digital age.

Is a book about printed pages ? Maybe a linear stream of textual information ? If books could be updated at no cost, would they remain books ? And so on...
I guess they have courses on this in literature classes