My God, man!A book is a book, regardless of the form it takes. Books in the past were written on scrolls or papyrus or dried bark, but they were still known as books (or the equivalent in the appropriate language). The format of book that we tend to equate with the word "book" in the current era is technically called a codex.Everyone reads books in the 24th century, that's nonsense to me. Ask your kids what a typewriter is, and you'll know what people will say about books in 250 years.
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He's right, though. We see the ever-studious Jake Sisko and Janeway reading books-by-PADD, but still refer to them as books nonetheless.
I love Doctor Who's Silence in the Library two-parter. They're in the quite-distant future and the Doctor points out that even though books have since evolved into downloads and programs and holograms and other forms, the actual form of the book never goes away. The smell, the feel, the pleasure of the paper texture keeps pulling people back. At that point in the human future, an entire planet is beautifully made into a classical library, not unlike the Library of Congress on a massive scale (complete with public transportation).