Certainly paper maps don't have the market the used to, but they still have their place.
That said, perhaps they could/should release map sets [on memory card] that could then be loaded onto a GPS unit; providing new or different features than the built-in maps.
I like the "tell the publisher that you want to read this book on Kindle" link that Amazon places on the page for each book on their site.
I was buying my mom a book with full-color illustrations of birds - the kind with a built-in speaker that plays the bird calls. I'm sure *that* would translate really well to Kindle.
It really suprises me that Rand McNally never jumpped on the GPS bandwagon in the early stages. The could have easily partnered with a large GPS manufacturer to suply the maps for the software.
On a personal note. I still dont have a GPS, nor do I want one. I have my trusty Rand McNally Road atlas (year 2000) in the map pocket of my passenger seat. It goes with me everywhere I travel and I have never gotten lost.
@jaydez: I also do not have a GPS, and I also still keep my BIG PAPER BOOK atlas in my car, and I also have never gotten lost with it. (It also does not ask for batteries or to be plugged into anything. Sometimes the best tech is still the old tech. Thank you cartographers.
@friendslikeJimRome: There's still a need for a source of information that isn't suspect. Do you really trust wikipedia? And casual searches w/ google don't give you any sense of which results are real and which are the ravings of any nutjob with access to the net.
The best thing about EB was that you were pretty sure that a good amount of research had gone into their entries, and that it made a good place to begin your research.
@dc-united: "And casual searches w/ google don't give you any sense of which results are real and which are the ravings of any nutjob with access to the net."
No but casual searches with a modicum of thought will.
And you'll end up with a ton more information quickly than those dry two-paragraph entries gave us.
It's just a new analytical skill for the next generation. They'll be fine. (I hope.)
12/18/08
That said, perhaps they could/should release map sets [on memory card] that could then be loaded onto a GPS unit; providing new or different features than the built-in maps.
12/18/08
It's the sound of Mapquest and Google eating Rand McNally's lunch.
12/18/08
I was buying my mom a book with full-color illustrations of birds - the kind with a built-in speaker that plays the bird calls. I'm sure *that* would translate really well to Kindle.
12/18/08
that is a marvelous book; your mom will love it (mine did)
12/18/08
On a personal note. I still dont have a GPS, nor do I want one. I have my trusty Rand McNally Road atlas (year 2000) in the map pocket of my passenger seat. It goes with me everywhere I travel and I have never gotten lost.
12/18/08
Thank you cartographers.
12/18/08
12/18/08
The best thing about EB was that you were pretty sure that a good amount of research had gone into their entries, and that it made a good place to begin your research.
12/18/08
No but casual searches with a modicum of thought will.
And you'll end up with a ton more information quickly than those dry two-paragraph entries gave us.
It's just a new analytical skill for the next generation. They'll be fine. (I hope.)