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Old 07-11-2014, 02:27 PM   #10
speakingtohe
Wizard
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Join Date: Apr 2010
Device: sony PRS-T1 and T3, Kobo Mini and Aura HD, Tablet
Quote:
Originally Posted by Katsunami View Post
If something is digital, many people immediately seem to think that it has to be very cheap or even for free. They were happy paying €50 for a retail game or €10 for a paperback book in 2000, but they balk at paying €45 for a digitally distributed game or €7 for an ebook.

"It's too expensive."

Hell no. It's gotten cheaper, even though prices have been inflated greatly in the last 15 years, making it cheaper still.
Well as consumables go they are cheaper where I am than a lot things. I just bought a quart of milk for $5.99. A cheese burger and fries is $14.99 in the only restaurant in town and it is super busy.

And in the real world where I spend the winter, I am always amazed at how many people I know who are far from affluent who spend $10+ a day at Starbucks. Probably cuts way into their ebook budget
Quote:

But honestly, I see the value degradation in my own library. Before 2011, when I got my Touch (I tried a Cybook in 2007, but the ebook market was too young then, at least for me), I would consider each book carefully, especially if it was the first in a (long) series. Price and required space caused me to be selective.

Now? Using Kobo codes, I buy entire series on a whim because they look good and get good reviews, and I download classics for free or next to nothing (50+ Delphi books here). I have almost 800 books in my library now, counting the Delphi's as one book each, while they can contain 15 or 20 novels.

15 years ago, such a library would have cost me at least €8.000, and an entire room. Now, I'd be very surprised if I spent more than €800 (10%). I think it would be closer to €500. Also, it costs me 5GB on a 1000GB disk (0.5%), and no physical space.

Nowadays, a book (e-book) is just a cheap consumable, even more so than the shabbiest paperback ever was. Buying e-books is so fast and cheap that getting and returning books at the library for free is actually more expensive in transportation costs. For the cost of one trip to and back from the library to go and get the paper book (if they have it), I can BUY the e-book... twice.
For me to go to a library that has books I haven't read, is an $80 gas bill, or if I went on the bus, $65 and a $300 hotel bill as the bus runs twice a week.

eBooks are ridiculously cheap by comparison.

Four years ago I would buy a lot of books in the winter and pay $100 or more to ship them, just so I would have books to read. Didn't resent that or anything, it was just what it cost. Now if I buy them I don't have to ship them and I can get a pretty good selection perfectly legally from my big city library.

Helen
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