My ebook reader knows exactly where I left off any book that I was reading. No worries about damaging spines or setting the house on fire or anything silly like that.
First, it's obviously LED, which is not a fire risk. And also not a UV light, which means it's not going to fade the print in less than a 200 years. It's why you have to go out of your way to find special lights if you want an indoor tan.
The general science, physics and mechanics province, and neighboring regions, are not your forte, Mr. Constant. Although you're right that your typical collector types who fetishize consumer products would never treat a book like that, though I doubt those guys even take the Mylar off long enough to read them anyway.
I don't know . . . if I got that I wouldn't be using it as a bookmark. I would buy the thing, then buy the perfect book for it (if the book in the image didn't come with it) and then I would use it as an adorable, clever lamp. That's it.
Won't overheat if you are using CF style lightbulbs (you know, those curly ones). You're not still using the old fashioned light bulbs that waste most of the power they consume as heat, are you? That's so 19th century.
Is that one of those things those guys wearing bedshirts and nightcaps carry around with them in old HDTV movies?
Also, cause the print to fade? Now you're just looking for a reason to be pissy. Do you routinely use high-UV bulbs in your nightlight?
Here is evidence you're wrong about giant books.
The general science, physics and mechanics province, and neighboring regions, are not your forte, Mr. Constant. Although you're right that your typical collector types who fetishize consumer products would never treat a book like that, though I doubt those guys even take the Mylar off long enough to read them anyway.
I think if that's all it is meant to be it works.
Either that or "Now you're just looking for a reason to be pissy."