Saturday, 4 January 2014

READING ON ROSY



I cannot say that I enjoy marina life.

Admittedly, there are some positive sides to it. It saves on diesel fuel because, with an electrical hook-up, there is no need to run the engine in order to make electricity. If the marina is well run, then rubbish disposal and the acquisition of coal, kindling and the like, is much simplified.

Food shopping can be a bit tricky, if only because not many marinas have a decent supermarket within easy walking/cycling distance. (I'm happy to use local grocers whilst out cruising, but prefer to overwinter near to a supermarket, both for the (generally) lower prices and the greater choice).

Apart from taking Fanny-the-Woof out walking, my main winter occupation is reading.  I have some 3 hundred books on Rosy, so the shelves are getting a bit full. My computer has a Kindle within it, but that means having to perch the computer on my knees when I'm reading, and racking-up greater electricity bills. I am therefore in the process of acquiring a 'proper' Kindle. By chance, a friend had recently upgraded his Kindle, so I bought the old one from him at a very good price. When I say 'old' I really mean it! Its bottom quarter is a typing key-board. For the un-initiated, a modern Kindle can hold 1000 books.

Over the last few weeks, I have been searching around for e-books.

I soon learned that books published before 1924 loose their copyright status. (It seems that authors only have the copyrights of their books for 90 years). Hence, today, books first published pre 1924 are, generally, easy to acquire at zero cost in e-book format. The only hiccup is that one often looses any illustrations that were in the book.

Books being published now often quote 2 prices, one for the book, and a cheaper price for the e-book version. There are already some boaty e-books.

The up side of all this is that preparing an e-book, and putting it up for sale, can be done quite easily, so 'self publishing' is always a possibility. The downside is that a high proportion of such book could do with serious editing by someone who knows their English grammar!


I had vaguely thought about editing my old web-log posts BUT . . . . I am now 70 years old, and feel that there are many other things I would prefer to be doing during my remaining days.

7 comments:

  1. Hoi (as they say here in north Holland) Bill,
    At last have found your blog. We could never enjoy marina 'car park' life either and are soo pleased to be back in Euroland now that Skipper's health is stable again.
    I expect you know what happened to our German/Poland trip and that Temujin is aiming to return to France via Belgium this year. We'll meet up again with them at Marjory's boatyard. So, we are all around if you come over and it would be very good to meet you and Fanny.

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  2. Yeah! Yeah! I get it!! Everyone just uses me as a gateway to Fanny!! (Who, as I write this is sitting on my feet to keep them warm). My memory is a bit iffy these days - please nudge me at remind me about Marjory's boatyard - where is it! My 'plan' (Ho Ho!!) is to twiddle a bit up north, but to winter down Briare way. Hope we meet soon. Toodle pip!! Bill

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  3. Marjory's is the Roelens-Maes boatyard near the 2 locks at Peronnes on the Nimy.

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  4. Be sure to get a 3G Kindle. You will then have totally free emailing and web browsing whatever European country you're in. Invaluable, and used by us for the last 6 years in many countries.

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    1. Many thanks for that. Am I right to assume that the 3G Kindle requires regular dollops of money even if you don't use its world wide web capabilities? The bottom of the range Kindle that I have been given (for free, by an up-grading friend) is free except, of course, when you buy books for it - though some of those are free as well.

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    2. No, you are quite wrong. Once you have bought your 3G Kindle there is nothing more to pay. Browsing and emailing are completely free. Slow, maybe - but are you in a rush? I personally find it slow to have to find a TO or library with wifi to check or send emails and in Germany, unless in a hotel, wifi for travellers is virtually non-existent. All the best.

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  5. I tried using our 3G Kindle in that way. It was excruciatingly slow and eventually slapped my wrist and said I couldn't anymore.

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