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Why I’m excited about the Nook

For those of you who don’t know, the Nook is Barnes & Noble’s new eBook reader. It was announced this week, and despite the goofy name, it has instantly shot to the top of my holiday wish list, although it’s at least as much about what I think the Nook represents as the product itself.

A nap nook - my second favorite kind of nook.

A nap nook - my second favorite kind of nook.

See, the whole concept of an eBook reader has been hamstrung from the start by the lack of a common, open format. There are plenty of other hurdles: the lack of color screens, the incredibly slow refresh rates of E-Ink displays, the high cost of adoption. But the real setback in my mind has always been the fact that a physical book doesn’t limit who can read it, or where, or when. You can lend a book to a friend. You can sit in a bookstore and leaf through a book before purchasing. If you buy your books from Barnes&Noble, and your friend buys their books from Borders, that doesn’t mean you can never read your friends books, or vice versa.

A good analogy is the mp3 player. The file format mp3 came along while the only way to consume digital music was still off of physical discs that spun around and were read by “lasers.” But thanks to the internets, and small hard drive space, the mp3 format took off, followed by hardware mp3 players. Think about it: they’re called mp3 players, not emusic players. By the time Apple rolled around to dominate the market, as much as they wanted to use their own fancy proprietary format (AAC), every iThing supports mp3 files. Even the music you buy through iTunes or Amazon can be had DRM-free and device-agnostic.

This has not been the case with ebook readers. Amazon’s Kindle uses their own special format that nobody else can use. If you want to read some other type of file on a Kindle, like a PDF, you have to use their special file conversion software to work some voodoo magic and have it anointed by Bezos blood before it can pass through the fiery tunnel of Whispersync and reach your device. And that’s IF that other file type is supported.

So, why am I excited about the Nook? Because it looks like maybe the final puzzle piece that will topple the ebook format quagmire. The Nook uses the EPUB format, an open format which has also been embraced by Google’s vast store of digitized books, as well as Sony who recently converted their entire store to the format. This essentially leaves the Kindle as the lone proprietary ebook store. And while Google and Sony jumped on the epub bandwagon first, Barnes&Noble is in a unique position to actually compete with Amazon for content. Any ebook reader that comes out from now on will basically be required by market forces to support epub, and from there the road gets a lot smoother.

But that isn’t all. B&N is uniquely taking advantage of their brick-and-mortar stores to do some very booklike things that have been glaringly absent from the current options. You’ll now be able to lend ebooks to a friend for a short period of time (although  how many times you can lend a book, or to how many different people, is in question. This thread says that it will be very restrictive, but things can always change. Better to start heavy-handed and get looser than the other way around). You’ll also be able to take your Nook to a B&N and read a book from their online store right on your device, without purchasing. I think this is brilliant, since it really addresses how people actually shop for and handle books. There’s also a great licensing opportunity here. Much like Amazon allows anyone to sell an item through their online store, B&N (or someone else, Borders perhaps) could allow other bookstores to sell digital content through the B&N store and offer similar in-store reading and lending opportunities. Boutique bookstores could actually have a chance to draw customers back to their stores thanks to an ebook reader. I’m not saying it will happen, but it could.

The Nook also has some other nerd-lovable features. To get around the slow refresh, grayscale limitations of E-ink, there’s a capacitive touchscreen LCD at the bottom to help you navigate your library of books and other control features. On top of that, the device is powered by Google’s open mobile OS Android. These two things could open up a world of possibilities. Just a few mundane thoughts: a Pandora app to stream music while you read, or a twitter app to comment on what you’re reading. What I’d really love to see, though, is a coverflow-like page skimmer. It’s already been noted that the Nook will feature a coverflow interface for browsing your books to identify them by the cover, but how about while reading being able to “flip” through pages? One of the biggest inadequacies of ebook readers until now has been poor navigation, the loss of being able to easily jump forward and backward through a novel to find a particular passage based on your memory of physically where it was located in the book. I might cry with joy when I am able to flick through miniature pages on the touchscreen to navigate whatever I’m reading. This might not be available on the Nook when it first hits stores, but it will get there eventually. I’d put money on it.

Should you buy a Nook? There’s still the problem of the cost ($259 upfront, plus buying new books). And even though the content pool has gotten a lot bigger, there’s still a lot not available, including newspapers and out-of-print material. And there are other potential winners coming from companies like Plastic Logic (who have partnered with B&N) and Apple that will have bigger screens, maybe full color, and who knows whatever other features. The Nook is certainly not the perfect ebook reader, and it will get surpassed, but I think it will be the first to break open the ebook floodgates to the public, which is reason enough for an early adopter like me to jump on board.

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Review of the Vertical Jump Bible, Part 1

I love basketball. L. O. V. E. love. I love watching it – both college and pro – I love playing it, I love talking about it, and I can already tell I will love blogging about it. And, being that I’m a skinny 5’8″ white guy, of course one of my dreams is to be able to dunk a basketball. Regulation size, on a regulation hoop.

So, I’ve set out on a mission to improve my vertical jumping ability and reach that goal. At 26 years old, I think my peak-athletic window is closing, so it’s now or never, and with that I took the plunge and purchased one of those sketchy-feeling vertical leap training manuals, specifically the Vertical Jump Bible. One look at that website will tell you all you need to know about why I was hesitant to spend money on this, but my own exercise routine wasn’t cutting it and I thought, if nothing else, it would be $40 well spent toward some entertaining blog stories.

I also thought this would be a great opportunity to actually review this manual. There’s a ton of information online (as with all things) for increasing one’s vertical, with some packages claiming “super secret formula” going for as high as $300! And while all of these sites have plenty of testimonials, there’s very little in the way of real review and analysis. The best I could find were short threads on various bulletin boards of people saying it was or wasn’t good, never going in-depth. At $40, the VJB is one of the cheaper options out there with at least some people online claiming that it’s effective. It’ll be some weeks before I can definitively answer that, but I’ve already gained some insight that hopefully will benefit future short caucasians in their quest for that elusive slam-dunk glory.

What you get when you purchase the Vertical Jump Bible

For $40, you get the main training guide, about 150 pages, plus two supplements (20 and 50 pages), all as PDFs. Except, the main guide is protected by Virtual Vault software from CBP, a stupid method of blocking access to things like printing out the document or sharing it with others. The VJB website actually says that you can print the document, but I couldn’t get it to. Not only that, but when you first open the file you have to register it with the Virtual Vault software, after which it becomes licensed to THAT COMPUTER ONLY. Meaning you can’t open and read the file anywhere else. If you registered this on your laptop and then your harddrive died…oh well. Plus, it only works on Windows. Own a Mac and you just paid $40 for this? Too bad. Not exactly customer friendly.

Fortunately, the Virtual Vault software is basically nothing but a file wrapper: I fired up a hex editor, deleted the protection stuff around the actual book, and voila, I now have an unrestricted PDF. To the author of the Vertical Jump Bible: stop wasting money on DRM. Your book is not that special, you’re only frustrating your customers, and you’re stuffing CBP’s pockets for a product that anyone can break in a couple of minutes.

My baseline

Of course, before I can review the performance of the VJB, I needed to get a baseline. How high can I actually jump? And more importantly, how much higher do I need to jump to be able to dunk?

Vertical Jump Meter with paper and tape

Makeshift vertical jump meter

So I got my best friend to help me set up a makeshift vertical leap measure. With a tape measure, some scrap paper, and some scotch tape, we created this –>
Each strip of paper is 1 inch tall, and we marked from 8 feet to 9’6″. We then took some basic measurements: my standing reach (how high I can reach when flat footed on the ground), my stationary vertical leap (how high I can jump from a standing postion), and my running vertical leap. My friend spotted my measurements (from a step ladder) as I flailed and swatted at tiny strips of paper.

Here are my results:

Measurement Height (inches)
Standing Reach 90
Stationary vertical 108
Running vertical 114

So I have a standing reach of 7’6″ and a standing vertical of 9′, giving me an 18 inch vertical jump. But that’s just straight up from a standstill. With a running start, I reached 9’6″ for a 24 inch vert. Certainly not a bad start. But definitely a lot of room for improvement. After these tests, I’ve settled on a lofty goal: I want to add another 22 inches to my vertical. I figure, 6 more gets me to the rim, another 12 gets my hand high enough to actually dunk, and another 4 gets my elbow almost to the rim, at which point I could do some spectacular things :-) . A 46″ leap: the dream of every 5’8″ guy who’s ever touched a basketball.

Standing under my makeshift vertical jump measuring tool

Standing under my makeshift vertical jump measuring tool

Vertical jump from a running start

Rising up for a vertical jump from a running start

But can the Vertical Jump Bible get me there? It’s certainly not going to happen overnight, but if the online testimonials are to be at all believed, even more impressive feats have been achieved, so we’ll see. I’ll be back in a few weeks to update on my progress and give some more insight into how much value a $40 pdf about jumping can actually provide.

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