“Starting with the CD-ROM era of the 1990s, the development of “enhanced” ebooks, usually with…”
“Starting with the CD-ROM era of the 1990s, the development of “enhanced” ebooks, usually with multimedia elements, has seemed to be a natural evolution. Yet the industry has struggled with early commercial and artistic failures, suggesting that consumers don’t want or need multimedia content — such enhancements may be distracting. There is widespread concern that a multimedia ebook is not “enhanced” in any way, and that it is actually inferior to its quieter, static counterpart. I propose that digital-only additions to texts should pass a two-fold test of utility. First, such additions should be *immersive*: they should appear to be natural extensions of the work, satisfying the curiousity of readers at the moment that these curiousities naturally arrive in the course of consuming the text. Enhancements must also be *nontrivial*. Loading up a reference work with links to Google Maps or Wikipedia offers little value the reader could not obtain independently. Primary source material, topics not easily discoverable via search engines, or deeply curated dives into ancillary topics represent rewarding additions that readers will want to explore.”
– “What Can We Do with Books”, Liza Daly (2012)