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Old 04-12-2010, 09:41 AM   #54
Acreo Aeneas
Kobo Aura
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Posts: 252
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Chicago, Illinois
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Well the new pricing really puts a hamper on my purchases since 40% of them are new release novels. I'm already looking at the higher prices for some wishlisted books. Some went from just under $10 to over $20 (hardcover pricing). Others are somewhere in between, but what gets me mad is that most of these books also are released in mass market paperback priced at around $8/9. Why should I go and pay more than I would for a mass market paperback on a eBook? It's not like they're giving me some extras I wouldn't find in a printed bound book.

Unlike Maggie, the two main attractions for my switch to digital was: 1) lower pricing (or was the decline to lower pricing) and 2) digital storage vs. physical storage. I don't see how they'll take away the second, but if most publishers start adopting the new model, then we can pretty much say goodbye to digital books being adopted instead of paper.

Think of how interest in hybrids were initially before any final pricing was announced. There were a lot of people willing to buy into those types cars if the pricing was reasonable. They we found out, you'd be paying $30,000+ for one. Interest mostly disappearing overnight except for a few diehard enough to become early adopters. Now with pricing (and availability) floating down to more reasonable prices, people are slowly starting to adopt the new vehicles. Unfortunately, they are still typically more expensive, but don't offer a significant enough boost in fuel economy compared to the more efficient gas engines out now (not to mention you still pay for gas).

Last edited by Acreo Aeneas; 04-12-2010 at 09:46 AM.
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