{
  "$type": "site.standard.document",
  "createdAt": "2023-12-29T23:22:00+00:00",
  "description": "Stripe's hosted version of Poor Charlie's Almanack is a vision of what digital books could be, instead of what we got, which kind of sucks.",
  "path": "/stream/poor-charlies-almanack",
  "publishedAt": "2023-12-29T23:22:00+00:00",
  "site": "at://did:plc:swxoj3wjlwodcqs5ipmvgnug/site.standard.publication/3mnv7gbn3czno",
  "tags": [
    "Books",
    "Design"
  ],
  "textContent": "I don't care particularly about Warren Buffett or Charlie Munger: I don't think that I care about money enough. Does this make me naïve? At any rate I like what Stripe, who has published the latest edition of Poor Charlie's Almanack, has done with the website. They don't call it an ebook, and it doesn't come in a downloadable .epub file or anything—but it's an ebook.John Gruber's right about the sorry state of ebooks. I don't mind reading books on my Kindle, but the certain quality to physical books that makes them really memorable, to me, is missing when I read digitally. I like reading on my Kindle, but it doesn't move me the way a real book does.I wish that there was a platform, an opportunity, for books to be published like this: with attention to typography, with pictures and hyperlinks. I wish I cared about Charlie Munger and I wish I cared to read this silly book, because I want to spend more time with multimedia reading experiences like this. These feel like worthier alternatives to paper & glue than the spartan XML documents we got.(Requisite complaint about how it spins my computer CPU up. I liked it better when Gruber was taking potshots at web developers.)",
  "title": "Poor Charlie's Almanack",
  "updatedAt": "2023-12-29T23:22:31+00:00"
}