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Old 09-12-2009, 01:38 PM   #46
6charlong
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Posts: 896
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Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: US
Device: Kindle, nook, Apple and Kobo
Quote:
Now that we have four full-size ebookstores to choose from (Kindle, Sony, Barnes and Noble, and eBooks.com), are folks noticing wide variations in prices? So far I'm coming to the conclusion that Sony's bookstore is the most expensive, right up there with eBooks.com. Most interesting has been my perception that the Barnes and Noble pricing has been surprisingly aggressive, and that more often than not it has the best prices (sometimes significantly so).

Unfortunately I have a Sony Reader, so if I wish to read a book on the Reader I am frequently finding myself having to decide to buy the most expensive book. I am interested in purchasing one now, for example, that is $19 through the Sony Store, but only $9.99 at Barnes and Noble--what a difference! At that price it's not difficult deciding on the Barnes and Noble version, and then reading it on my iPhone. But then, if this continues my beloved Sony Reader may end up as one of those unused "gadgets" collecting dust on my shelf.

What are others experiences, are they different from mine?

Going back to Spinoza's original post, I think we are going about this backward. His/her problem is finding books he wants to buy but that the PRS can't render. If our book readers could render every major eBook format we would be free to go to the lowest priced vendor. That's the only way true competition can enter this debate.

I've been appalled at the number of times I've found a book I wanted that was not published in a format my reader could render, thus I was unable to buy it at all. I think that if we're going to try to pressure anyone we should try to pressure the hardware manufacturers to include all the secure formats except Mobipocket (because it won't work if there's another secure format on the same reader) and provide rendering engines for every DRM-free format as well.

ePub is a step in that direction, but there is an enormous backlog of good material that only exists in other, secure formats and will probably never appear in ePub form.
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