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[personal profile] fivemack
On one side of the screen, I am writing comments in a LJ discussion of climate change and what is to be done about it.

On the other side I am trying to find the cheapest way of getting to Almaty this Easter, returning from Bishkek. Looks like Turkish Airlines via Istanbul, two four-hour legs in a 737-800 with a five-hour wait at Ataturk airport in the middle, both ways. I think the steppe, Issyk-Kul and the Tienshan mountains are worth two and a half books of mild inconvenience.

I suppose four hundred pounds would buy me an awful lot of travel books about Central Asia which I can read while sitting in Cambridge, I could cycle over to Willingham if I wanted to see hunting with raptors, and Scotland has no great shortage of snow-caps, but I can't convince myself that the fens are a substitute for the steppe.

Date: 2009-01-17 05:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fivemack.livejournal.com
That's a bet with quite high stakes on the ubiquitous availability of power points on Russian and Kazakh trains - though I suppose that's also required for being able to take photos out of the train windows.

I suppose one Anathem-weight of NiMH AA batteries is 51 batteries or over 130 amp-hours @ 1.2V = 165 watt-hours, which might be enough if only ebook readers used less than 700mW of power and ran on AA batteries.

An eee battery is 4400mAh and 7.4 volts (so corresponds to twelve standard AA batteries) and runs the eee for nearly three hours, so I'd need something a lot lower power than an eee.

The Sony Reader supposedly runs for 6000 page-turns (thank you e-ink) off a single charge, which might actually be enough assuming I can recharge in Almaty itself. Whilst it charges its custom battery over USB, I have a wall-power-to-USB widget which came with my iPhone, and I'm sure someone makes a box with lots of AA batteries providing 4.8V to a USB connector on the front - in a pinch this is a level of electrical engineering I could run to. I can't find the Sony Reader battery capacity in real units anywhere.

There is of course the availability issue for ebooks; there's an awful lot of Project Gutenberg, but to read the complete works of P G Wodehouse, mingled with nineteenth-century travel writing, on the way to Kazakhstan and the complete works of Dickens mingled with early twentieth-century popular science on the way back would be at least eccentric.

Date: 2009-01-17 07:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] htfb.livejournal.com
You only get PGW up to the copyright limit, though. There's plenty still in copyright. Not that your suggestion sounds like a bad use of time.

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