I am a very late adopter when it comes to tech stuff; I only purchased a Kindle last January. I've always been a big reader, but I've never enjoyed reading things on my pc. It seems like the e-books would have been a tough sell before handheld devices became commonplace. Of course, you couldn't sell e-readers without e-media, but it was pretty ballsy to do new online-only books in 2000.
Somebody has to be first out of the trench though, right?
Edit: I'm reading The Far Side Gallery vol. 3. Gary Larson is a genius.
I'm pretty sure some of the first e-readers were starting to come out around the time the SCE e-books started.
I will never understand people who post on computer bulletin boards to complain about how much they hate reading off computer screens. Look, reading isn't always comfortable. Reading a heavy hardback book can be hard on one's wrists.
The Dark Crystal: The Ultimate Visual History is a kind of a pain to try to read, according to the stats on Amazon.com it's 9.2in x 1.1in x 11in and weighs 3.2 pounds. So it's big and cumbersom, and heavy (for a book), but so far it's been good enough that I'm willing to put up with it.
The one book I have that's going to be even worse is Firefly: Celebration, which over 500 pages long and is 11.2in x 9in x 2in and 5.6lbs. Just for reference, Full Circle, the first regular Trek paperback I came across on Amazon is 4.2in x 1.2in x 6.8in and 10.4oz.
I finished reading the first (Kelvinverse) Star Trek comic collection last night, and I enjoyed it. The art was nice, and the stories were pretty good remakes of their episodes with a few Kelvinverse twists thrown in. I'll separate my thoughts by the two arcs it has.
Where No Man Has Gone Before
I thought the way they worked Gary Mitchell and Lee Kelso in was pretty good. I was a disappointed they didn't bring in a Kelvinverse version of Dhener. I liked the Mitchell recreating scenes from first movie in the end. Having Spock show up to help Kirk defeat Mitchell was a nice twist.
Galileo Seven
I don't really remember the original episode, and I had to stop my rewatch before I finished it this morning, so I can only compare the first few minutes.
There didn't seem to be quite as drastic of changes with this one as there were with WNMHGB, mainly just tweaks to the dialogue and changing out the brunette yeoman for Rand.
The biggest inconsistencies I noticed with the movies is the fact that they seemed to be using the TOS stardates instead of changing them to the Kelvinverse version with the year as the first four numbers.