Stephen Harris ([info]sweh) wrote,
@ 2008-03-02 21:37:00
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cybook, ebook, pdf
The Bookeen Cybook 3 reader can read PDF files. BUT it's pretty pathetic at it. You can't zoom in (you can "fit to page" by height or width, and rotate 90 degrees). So a letter sized PDF gets shrunk to something less than 1/4 of that size. It makes things really hard to read! PDFs that have been formatted for the small device are perfectly readable (the Cybook came with "Accelerando" by Charlie Stross and that appears to work out around 60% of a paperback page per PDF page and is easily readable) but PDFs designed for letter sized papers are almost impossible to read.

Disappointing.

At least in eBook reader mode you can select from multiple different fonts. I've actually selected a font size 2 choices smaller than the default because that fits more on a page (so less page turns, so less waiting for the eInk paper to refresh) and is still readable. The font smaller than that is too small for me to read in comfort.

I decided not to read "20,000 Leagues" but to read the next Dresden book in my "unread" pile (#8; Proven Guilty). And now I'm a little annoyed at the physical size of the dead-tree edition! Amazing how quickly I got used to to lightweight size of the Cybook. But I guess I'll lug the dead tree around for a while :-) This means my battery life testing won't be very accurate. But it might work as a good test of how much drain there is while the cybook is turned off.

Now I don't understand the economics behind the selling of ebooks. Well, firstly I don't know how much money the author actually gets per sale of a paperback, nor whether they get the same amount for ebook editions (or if that's a seperately negotiated contract). But I think they're gouging the customer here. eBook distribution costs must be vastly less than the cost of physically dealing with dead-trees; printing and distribution and shipping (and return of unsold items for pulping) and physical storage space and..and..and...

"Proven Guilty" is available in paperwork for $7.99 from Amazon. They sell the Kindle edition for $6.39 (which is useless to me, since I don't have a Kindle). That's $1.60 less than the dead-tree. But surely the savings to the publisher and reseller must come to more than that. So the profit on an eBook appears to be totally unrelated to the actual cost of the book. Elsewhere I've found this eBook (in Mobi format, which I could use) for $9.32 (ebookmall) or $7.99 (diesel-ebooks, mobipocket.com). WTF?

I still like the idea of dead-trees for my shelf. If I'm gonna buy primarily in eBook format then it MUST be DRM free (in particular, I can backup the files and restore them to _any_ reader I decide to get in the future; the book isn't tied to the specific breakable piece of hardware). Given how much I've come to like the Cybook, buying ebooks isn't as far out there as I thought it would be, just a year ago.

But I'm not going to pay the same amount as is being charged for paperbacks.

I'm almost seriously contemplating dropping publishers without a sensible ebook policy. Given I have an unread pile of around 40 books (and that pile will be refreshed due to birthdays and Christmas), I could probably last 3 or 4 years on that and the 160 books I've got from Baen. If I like a Baen book I may buy the dead-tree edition to help support them. Earlier in this post I mentioned that it came with Accelerando; well I also bought that in dead-tree because this is a book I want to read and wanted to pay the author for the right. I don't want to steal from authors, but I don't want to be ripped off by publishers.

Maybe by the time that I run out of free ebooks and my backlog of dead-trees has diminished some of the more forward looking authors (hey, I'm talking about SciFi here... there must be some!) will have pushed publishers to better ebook policies. Or maybe I'll go back and reread some of my existing books. In a library of well over 1,000 books I'm sure I'll find something interesting to reread!

So a warning to publishers: sort out your ebook policies or else you'll end up losing my money, totally!



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[info]autopope
2008-03-03 10:34 am UTC (link)
I've been talking to a number of publishers. Basically, the story I keep hearing is that they don't know how much to charge for ebooks. There's internal fear and resistance to the idea of undercutting the price of the dead-tree edition, because "it'll cannibalize our sales". This ignores the fact that, for a dead-tree edition, something between 50% and 75% of the cover price goes to third parties (bookstores and wholesalers) who simply aren't in the picture when there's an ebook sale; they could in principle sell ebooks for 50% of the paperback price and still make a higher profit (due to the lower production costs -- no paper and ink).

Some of the smarter publishers have already realized this. Baen, for example. I believe Tor have got the picture. Hachette group's head of internet strategy is extremely cluefull (but working within a vast dinosaur of a multinational to promote change).

I expect the picture to improve drastically over the next few years, but expect pockets of pricing stupidity to persist for a long time.

Meanwhile, I have a Sony PRS-505. Lovely hardware, subject to a few caveats, and the open source libprs-500 package makes it open enough for this inveterate Mac/Linux gearhead: it's just a shame that it's hard to get [legal] content for it. (Unless you're me. I just ask my mates if they'll email me their latest novels in manuscript form :)

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[info]sweh
2008-03-03 12:00 pm UTC (link)
I've heard that "internal fear and resistance" story before. In the mid 90s I worked for a division of VNU Business Publications; the company that does "Personal Computer World" and, more relevant here "Computing". Now "Computing" was one of the free trade magazines. Over half the content was typically job adverts. That's how the magazine made its money. And they were extremely worried about the on-line job market. I actually built the technology for their first online job engine ("job.net") but internal company politics were worried this would impact on "Computing" ad sales, so they way they marketted to the agencies was "buy an ad in Computing and for a small extra you get it on the internet as well". A classic failure. Our biggest competitor ("jobserve") was undercutting us. "Computing" lost adverts, anyway. job.net went through a rebranding exercise and allowed direct ad placement without needing a dead tree edition, but it was still mis-marketted.

From being an industry leader in job adverts, VNU became an also-ran. All because they wanted to protect dead-tree profits.

I don't work there any more; I've no idea if they sorted themselves out!

Of course the publishing industry has one legitimate fear that VNU didn't; piracy. I won't buy DRM'd books because I don't want to lose content just because my ereader dies. I've got dead-tree editions on my shelves older than me. Who knows what ereader technology will be in use in 40 years time. I'm fed up with the vinyl/CD VHS/DVD/Blu-Ray "repurchase content" story; not gonna do that again! So they do have to worry about illegal redistribution of content hitting sales. Given the number of books being scanned and distributed, anyway, I think they're losing this fight already and just need to bite the bullet.

I hope you're right (I believe you are) about the picture improving. It's authors like you who will have to drive this change. SciFi authors have frequently written about near future technology, trying to predict things. Now you have a chance to _shape_ the future.

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[info]autopope
2008-03-06 06:42 pm UTC (link)
I am inclined to think that most ebook readers, given a choice between a pirated ebook and an official, DRM-free ebook in a standard open file format at a reasonable price would prefer to buy the official one.

(Defining "reasonable price" is a big problem: I figure it should probably be about 75% of the cheapest available dead-tree version, after discounts -- i.e. if the hardcover is "officially" $24 but discounted to $16 in Amazon, the ebook ought to be no more than $12, and if it's in mass-market the ebook should be $5 or less. Oh, and the $12 ebook should be available at least a month before the dead tree hardcover is in the shops, to justify the premium. On the other hand, the publishers will really not like that, unless Bookscan is also tracking ebook sales by this point.)

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