I tried that - sometimes I'd go through the shelves to find the books I'd returned. Then I took to removing the due date cards and playing dumb - gee, I'm not sure when these are due ... the cards fell out. Could you see if they're overdue? But they started catching on and would just dump the books onto the cart for returned books that were supposed to be checked in and reshelved.
Natter 69: Practically names itself.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Doesn't Kindle have a rule where a library can only check out an ecopy so many times before they have to buy a new copy? Whereas a physical book can be lent a hundred times if it physically holds out?
It's certain publishers (Harper Collins is the only one I can think of off the top of my head; there may be others), and not Kindle/Amazon.
And it is a shitty policy.
How many people here always (at least try to) type "Doctor Who" and not "Dr. Who"?
I do, because that's how the show spells it in the credits.
Whew. Finally caught up after being away for the extended weekend. Now to bitches.
It's certain publishers
Oh, right, it was the publishers, not the device. I'm still glad I went with the Nook, which has fewer restrictions.
I'm not sure what restrictions the Kindle even has, or how it compares to the Nook. I think the ability to check out library books (provided they're in Kindle format, obvs.) is awesome.
B&N only lets you lend a certain number of times, and only some books, which irritates me, because I want to get my sister hooked on both ebooks in general and some books in specific.
The number of loans doesn't seem to be publisher dependent for them, although which books you can loan at all probably is.
I was thinking primarily of restrictions on formats. I love being able to fling anything I like onto my Nook. I haven't looked at lending or getting things through the library.
"Dr." is a title, but "Doctor" is the character's name.
Other than Epub, what formats can the Nook read that the Kindle can't?
I was thinking primarily of restrictions on formats.
I think the Kindle is fine with PDFs and text files, but I haven't tested it, because I don't really have a need for that capability.
Honestly, I'm underwhelmed by the e-reader experience (the Kindle was a Christmas gift from my brother and SIL -- completely unexpected, because I've never expressed any interest in an e-reader). My brain likes physical books better. I mean the actual reading experience of ink on paper. I can't explain it.
I'll probably use the Kindle for library books, because I can check them out immediately instead of going to the library and/or making an inter-branch request (which takes anywhere from a few days to a week to actually get the book to my branch).
I'm sure that if I commuted on public transportation I would appreciate the convenience of the Kindle much more.