Tony's ramblings on Open Source Software, Life and Photography

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BookArmor High Impact Travel Case

My wife picked up the BookArmor High Impact Travel Case for me for my birthday. I'm flying to Atlanta next week and I was looking for something more durable than the neoprene case I'm currently using.

It was $38 from Amazon.

The first thing I noticed was it weighs a ton. Well, 1 pound to be exact. It's basically constructed of two metal plates, a heavy duty zipper and some durable canvas to tie it all together. It reminds me of the cases a lot of people carry their Bible to church in every Sunday, only heavy.

It comes with an alcohol pad and two "Snap-lock" strips that you stick to the back of the nook (or Kindle.) The warning on the instructions states "do not allow regular velcro to come in contact with the snap-lock strips. Regular velcro is impossible to remove from the snap-lock strips." Considering how strong the snap-lock strips tried to grab my bed's comforter, I'm not surprised.

Due to the curve in the back of the nook, I found it difficult to initially snap it down onto the cover after the strips were applied. I really felt to get the leverage I needed I should push in the middle of the screen, which obviously is not an option. Once it starts to snap in though, it's easy to complete.


DMCA, DRM and that new eBook Reader you got for Christmas

Photo copyright Creative Commons courtesy KuzeytacAs an owner of a new nook e-book reader, I've been watching the related boards somewhat.

Occasionally the issue comes up of "if I buy a book from Amazon can I read it on my nook?"

Unfortunately with rare exception the answer is not really.

There are technical ways to make it happen. You'd think it would be fine to download a book from Amazon, run a conversion and upload it to your nook reader. Technically you can. It's also a violation of the letter of the DMCA though more than likely it will be unenforceable in that context if it ever made it to court.

The simple act of having the decryption program on your computer to allow this is a violation of the DMCA. Helping someone find a copy of it is considered "distributing circumvention tools." First time offenders may be subject to a $500,000 fine, imprisoned for five years, or both. That's the criminal penalties. Civil penalties may also be incurred. All because someone wanted to read a book that they bought.


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