I thought the Fall '11 semester may have been it... and maybe it still can be:
4 classes coming up in the fall:
Christian Ethics - assigned 4 books
Principles of Preaching- assigned 3 books
Intro to Pastoral Ministry - assigned 4 books
Elementary Hebrew I - assigned 2 books
My hope was that I would be able to go completely digital this semester. Even if it meant purchasing on other digital book retailer websites, the fewer dead tree books (and dead tree trade books specifically) the better.
Of these 13 books:
4 are in Logos
1.) Beginning Biblical Hebrew - Mark D. Futato - OWN; Available on mobile devices 
2.) Preaching - John F. MacArthur - DO NOT OWN - Locked in the Nelson Bundle I can't afford and with resources I already own 
3.) How Effective Sermons Begin - Ben Awbrey - DO NOT OWN - My professor is the author; Still in a bundle gathering interest in Pre-pub 
4.) A Contemporary Handbook for Weddings & Funerals and Other Occassions - Abrey Malphurs & Keith Willhite - OWN - Bought it last night, then realized its not available on mobile devices
<-- [My DRAW face]
Of the other 9:
- 3 are available through Amazon
- 2 are available through Kobo
- 2 are available through B&N
- 2 are available through Google Books
- 1 is available through Apple iBooks
This still leaves me with 5 trade/non-text books that seem to not exist digitally plus 3 in Logos that I can't access this semester
My reasoning behind this post is to visualize the potential nitch I believe Vyrso could fill in the Christian scholarly trade book market that seems to not be pursued by any company in the digital book marketplace. I understand Logos provides books at some seminaries and Bible colleges, but it is by request and done in exclusivity for these schools.
My goals as a seminary student in regard to books:
- Buy as few trade books as possible (most are one time reads)
- Buy those I have to digitally to avoid these books taking over my family's living space
- Buy from as few digital book sellers as possible to minimize the amount of programs I'll need to access them (iPad now/who knows how it will work in the future)
My hope now is that through Vyrso and with 3 semesters left (God willing!) maybe 2012 will be the year of the Digital Seminarian!