Google Nexus 7 Tablet

Google's Nexus 7 Tablet

Google's Nexus 7 Tablet

Nexus 7 Tablet

My first ereaders were Palm Pilot handheld devices in the mid 1990s, on which I read such authors as Shakespeare and Mark Twain, despite their crude screens, the earliest of which was green, about 3″ x 4″.

So I was thrilled when I stumbled on the Sony 505 ereader at the Ann Arbor Borders Bookstore in 2007. I immediately recognized it as a significant upgrade in technology and a new home for my roughly thousand or more ebooks I had already downloaded from Gutenberg.org and elsewhere. Though I read many books and articles on it, the Sony 505 had lots of defects. It was slow, crashed a lot, and basically had no support from the manufacturer.

In May of 2011 I bought an Aluratech LIBRE Touch eBook Reader, with WiFi and a 7 inch TouchScreen. It was many generations of upgrading from the Sony 505, and I enjoyed it for a while, but then the fact that Aluratech never upgraded the software from Android 1.5 really degraded the experience. I plan to keep it, but it doesn’t handle PDFs efficiently enough, leading to frustrating delays and repetitions when  resetting the size, requiring tedious moments of waiting while the processor crunches the numbers…. Still, the 7 inch screen and overall size and weight makes for very pleasant reading, especially of ePubs, which don’t have the problems of PDFs.

I held off buying a conventional tablet, such as the iPad, which to me is huge and clunky. I had had a Netbook for years, and the size of  the various tablets were all too big to attract me. I felt I was duplicating what I already had, but without a keyboard.

Since I’ve had a Google Nexus S cellphone since late 2010, I immediately had an interest in the Nexus 7, upon good advice that it was coming out in late June. I bought one a few days after Google starting selling them online on June 27. Now that I’ve used Google’s Nexus 7 Tablet for nearly a month, I’m amazed at what an incredible advance it represents over the other ereaders I’ve had. It doesn’t matter to me that it doesn’t have a phone or camera capability. Of course, it’s more than an ereader, but that’s the primary purpose for which I bought one. That it has wireless and runs video exceptionally well are added advantages, as is its ability to handle email and surf the web. The enormous number of Android apps extend the device almost endlessly. The five built-in processors allow for instantaneous and efficient resizing of PDFs.

With the 16 gigabyte model, I copied my now roughly 5,000 ebooks and another 5,000 articles on to it with several gigabytes to spare, enough to probably more than double the number of books. A very seamless transition to a better and happier reading experience. The Android version is the current and most advanced, with free updates from Google, that support using the Kindle, Barnes and Noble, and the Kobo apps on it for expanded reading options, along with all the others.  Google Books has built-in availability for many more millions of books.

For people with serious literary and cultural interests, Google’s Nexus 7 Tablet might be the one  to consider if you have been holding off getting an ereading device.

Frederick Glaysher

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BOOK VIII and IX Summer Serialization

Daniel in the Lion's Den

Daniel in the Lion’s Den

BOOK VIII and IX Summer Serialization

BOOK VIII, THE ARGUMENT, online:

“Dante guides the Persona to Chartres Cathedral. Through the labyrinth, the Queen of Heaven. Europe, a hallowed tale, in colored glass. Erasmus returns to London, with the Persona, to outside Westminster Abbey. Browning’s poem “Christmas Eve” opens the door. Tennyson, a cordial reception and then a dressing down. The Federation of the World. Blake and Milton stroll over from St. Margaret’s Church. Milton guides the Persona to what Blake called, so rightly, “Englands green & pleasant land.” A simple parish church, surrounding graves, a church perhaps Thomas Hardy had restored, in need again of his services. A prayer. And the Lady of the Lake. Excalibur. Arthur returns. An inscription on the shining blade. Wainamoinen, along with Sigurd, Beowulf, and the Valkyries, lift the Persona from the Isle of green to a grove of green, turning toward early fall, as through a swirling tunnel of time, to a birch bench. Yasnaya Polyana. Tolstoy, along the path, discusses his beliefs, mourns his mistakes, grieves for Russia’s collapse into the crevasse. Two young poets swept away into the gulag emerge to carry the Persona from Russia, with Hadji Murad, heading south.”

https://books.fglaysher.com/The-Parliament-of-Poets-An-Epic-Poem-Book-VIII-Book-VIII.htm

BOOK IX, THE ARGUMENT:

“A house in Konya, Turkey, ancient Iconium, where St. Paul preached the Gospel. Around and around. Ethereal music and chanting. Another world. Rumi longing for the Beloved, the scent of her tresses, through fields of flowers to a riverbank of reeds. Attar and a soaring flock of birds fly the Persona, from the plain of Konya, that Valley of Search, to another plane, through Seven Valleys of the Soul, down into India and the plain of Agra. Leaving the Persona in Emperor Akbar’s city of Fatehpur Sikri, before the Ibadat Khana, the House of Worship, on the Pachisi Courtyard. Akbar’s court poet Faizi receives the Persona, along with many poet mystics and Sufis of India. Persuaded by Tagore, given the trials of the time, Rahman Baba, an Afghan Pashtun, comes down from his mountain village to confer with the Poet of the Moon. Evoking the majesty of human history, Lord Alfred Tennyson extols Akbar’s dream. The many oceans mingle. The dancing girls on the Pachisi Courtyard.”

https://books.fglaysher.com/The-Parliament-of-Poets-An-Epic-Poem-Book-IX-Book-IX.htm 

Frederick Glaysher

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For All Humanity

Crescent Earth Apollo 11 on return trip

Crescent Earth Apollo 11 on return trip

The Parliament of Poets is For All Mankind, East and West, North and South, to consider and ascend to a new vision of life, what it means to be a human being on this planet, meditate on the great image of the world, Earthrise, above the lunar crust, summoning us to realize we are but One People, inhabiting a whirling rock, flying together through the starry cosmos.

The deficient theories of much of the current American university–a corrupt and decadent institution that has betrayed much of the humane traditions of civilization in favor of “theory,” and other cynical, nihilistic banality, full of bemoaning resentment and triviality–the pernicious theories of deconstruction, and their like, have had a devastating impact on Western, indeed, world civilization, as they have gone around the globe.

One of the symptoms of modern intellectual decadence is its inability to perceive its own diminished state of affairs. Another is that it passes on its decline, increasingly, into the heads of its students, who are unable to perceive and understand what they’re being fed. Triviality, banality, frivolity, become ever more accepted, along with the dregs of nihilism, the lowest, crudest skepticism and cynicism of popular culture, which strictly speaking in no way constitutes culture, but its demise. Such is what the modern, contemporary American university, by and large, especially the English department, offers the young and impressionable, putty in the hands of the unworthy clerks of modernity, as Julien Benda so right understood.

Epic song does not stoop so low, as the American academy now regularly grovels, in obeisance to its contemptible theories. Epic song raises a new vision for the people, for the culture, helps renew and clarify what is the deepest, most profound vision that is already forming, independent of the poet and the poem, global now, inviting the people to a new way forward. The very nature of epic poetry is that it reassesses the prevailing order and articulates a fresh vision of life, already rising on  the foundations of the past.

https://www.facebook.com/events/188957824566313/

Along these lines, see my post on The American Scholar.

Frederick Glaysher

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BOOK VII Summer Serialization

The Boot of Italy

The Boot of Italy

Online, BOOK VII, THE ARGUMENT:

“Rising from zazen on the lunar platform, the Persona speaks with Job on an ash heap of moon dust. The Hebrew poets of Andalusia widen the perspective, with Hanagid directing Yehuda Halevi to guide him below to Mt. Carmel and Elijah’s slaughter of the prophets of Baal. Dante lifts the Persona from that scene of horror, flying up the boot of Italy, into Europe.”

“Through dark matter, through dark energy,
Saigyo guided me by satori’s brilliant light,
far beyond the Earth, supernal space…”

https://books.fglaysher.com/The-Parliament-of-Poets-An-Epic-Poem-Book-VII-Book-VII.htm

Frederick Glaysher

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