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#31 | |
Reading is sexy
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Sure, 26 checkouts would be a year of constant use, but what about all those times the book is checked out and never even cracked open? Or checked out and returned immediately because it isn't what you were expecting? HC is being excessively conservative in their estimates of book wear and tear. I'm more curious what happens if a publisher goes belly-up... for pbooks, the library would still have access to the books. But ebooks? What happens when the license expires and the publisher is out of business? The library loses that book forever? |
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#32 |
Wizard
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I have extreme doubts that 26 loans is "a year of use" since a good number of library users are heavy readers and will finish a book in a day or two and return it.
But regardless, not that I am in favor of this either, but if they wanted to make it a year of use ---- then why not make it a year of use? As in "You can loan this licensed eBook to your patrons for one year and then at the end of that year if you want to continue loaning it you will need to re-buy." At that point in time the library could re-evaluate whether or not the book is still in enough demand to warrant purchasing again. And not that would do this either, but disposable ebooks that evaporate after a year should cost less. The same way that a paper plate costs less than Corelle. |
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#33 |
Guru
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Publishing rights will always belong to somebody. Whether he makes use of them is another matter, of course.
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#34 | |
monkey on the fringe
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So if people only buy paper plates, expect them to raise the prices to Corelle levels. |
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#35 |
Literacy = Understanding
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I expect that this is the first step on the road to instituting agency pricing for pbooks, too. If we accept the rationale for agency pricing of ebooks (i.e., to prevent the devaluing of the content by selling at too low a price), then it stands to reason that pbooks are next. After all, what is being sold in pbooks is the content, not the covering, and supposedly there is no content difference between p- and ebook versions. Consequently, selling of the pbook for less than the ebook price devalues the pbook content.
Agency selling of pbooks could also solve some other problems that publishers face, particularly returns and overlarge print runs that result in remainders and a large secondary market. |
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#36 | |
monkey on the fringe
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#37 |
Reading is sexy
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#38 |
monkey on the fringe
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#39 | ||
Professional Contrarian
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I suspect, though, that the people who are upset about this may not want to accept any restricted lifespan on the ebooks, regardless of any economic implications. I also have a feeling that if HC backs down on the policy, they may charge libraries a substantially higher fee per copy, which has its own drawbacks. As to the "checked out, never read" -- that might be a consideration, but I don't think that standard is particularly relevant. Carrying the book out of the library runs the risk of wear and tear, even if all it does is sit in the bottom of a backpack for a week. |
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#40 | ||||
Wizzard
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If a book is sufficiently popular (the mass-market paperbacks of the first 2 of those Larsson books are mostly still on the "1 week Fast Reads" shelf around here, and likely the demand will keep up while they keep making more movies), means they could keep re-buying extra copies of the book to keep in circulation often enough to match the hypothetical 3x cost of the more expensive non-HC comparison in just 3 years if demand keeps up. (They kept The Da Vinci Code on the Fast Reads shelf for well over 2 years, IIRC.) Quote:
Seriously, if you go to the New eBooks Arrivals listing for the province-wide consortium and pick any title whatsoever, you'll usually see both multiple copies and a fairly long waiting list, even for weird obscure stuff. That Vampire Knitting book mentioned earlier? 15 patrons waiting on 4 copies. Some book on taking volunteer vacations where people have to do charitable work on them? 6 copies, 23 waitlist. Pop-history book about two guys probably totally unknown outside of Canada who led a short-lived unsuccessful rebellion within? 5 copies, 23 waitlist, popular enough that some of the libraries have bought an extra copy to offer their patrons. And this is just the stuff that's been newly available since no earlier than December to an overall population that's apparently smaller than that of most US cities and where e-readers are a mildly pricey novelty sold only in a few stores (no free shipping + taxes & import duties if one gets a Kindle). The numbers get a lot higher for fiction, especially US-bestseller popular fiction. If we switched over to an individual loan model, we'd burn through our "year"'s worth of licenses sufficient to cover "highest demand" titles in less than 2 months for each, on average. Quote:
It's the way they try to pretend they're unilaterally doing it for the good of the libraries which they are so deeply concerned about and want to help protect those poor books from being read for "free", instead of primarily pushing this for the benefit of their bottom line, which is so off-putting. Makes them look like a pack of weasels, and no one wants to give extra money to weasels when they demand it on top of what's already being given to them. But at least they're weasels who make their e-books available to the library in the first place, albeit weasels whose new-model e-books I won't bother to check out should they show in the library. I'll be perfectly satisfied with reading library paper copies and old-model HC e-books previously acquired in the catalogue. |
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#41 |
Wizard
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I've talked with the staff member at our library who is the go to Overdrive staff member. At this point she says she can't see adding new Harper Collins books to their catalog with these restrictions. At present time, most mid-level or highly popular books will have a waitlist of 8 to 10 patrons within one day of it being added and it will hit the mid-twenties within a week.
Which pretty much makes it - if you don't catch this book and get on the waiting list when we first list it then just forget about reading it. Which isn't fair. She shares my fear that the remaining 2 Big Publishers that allow their books (Penguin and Random House) will copy this policy and she anticipates many patrons calling to gripe at her that (Fill in the blank) book won't be available on Overdrive. They are still discussing what actions they want to take but at this time the general feeling is that it simply isn't an efficient use of library funds to invest in books which will disappear so quickly after purchase. So hopefully there is an awesome line-up of smaller publishers out there who will be willing to step in and fill the gap, I guess. |
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#42 | |
Addict
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You don't have to download anything, but it will give you an idea how easy a particular book is to find. |
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#43 |
Fanatic
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I did this just to see whether you were right - you were. Every book I have purchased in the last month was available on a torrent site.
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