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#31 |
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Sometimes to be late in the market is more advantageous.
We don't need a compelling platform for e-books, we need convenient and easily applicable standards. Think how the GSM standard which mandated replaceable SIM cards quickly gained more acceptance worldwide despite first largest operators successfully introducing and still using CDMA technology in the US. It is expected that e-ink prices will fall in 1 or 2 years. I base this prognosis on the fact that Russia and other countries are building e-ink screen factories. It may even lead to overproduction thus falling prices. Thus E-ink readers may become as ubiquitous as cheap mobile phones are today in India or China. Most likely Amazon will not be able to enter Asian markets and even Eastern Europe or Russia due to inexperience of cultural or linguistic traditions there. But e-book market will flourish with cheaper devices. |
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#32 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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In that case, yes; arriving late to market with me-too generic products would result in great success. That applies to entry level cellphones and dvd players but, unfortunately, *NOT* to the commercial ebook business. If cheap "standard" hardware were the key to success in ebook readers the horde of cheap chinese Adobe-ADEPT LCD readers flooding ebay would rule the ebook world instead of barely being footnotes. But, as it turns out, ebook readers, are *NOT* about the hardware at *all*. Focusing on the hardware misses the point completely; ebook readers are about providing *access* to ebooks. As a result, ebook readers do *not* best compare to entry-level cellphones but rather to other content delivery vehicles like gaming consoles. And the "compelling platform" is in fact pretty much the key to mainstream success. Focusing on hardware as a source of the product value's neglects the value-add from the device's software, its support network, and its commercial ebookstore. Just cranking out cheap hardware runnning quickie ports of open source, DRM-free readers or Adobe's generic ADE might be adequate for hobbyists and techies and is not a bad way to seed a market but to reach beyond the early adopter/enthusiast niche and get to the mainstream consumer requires better-integrated products with more sophisticated software and backend services. The situation in Germany and other european nations reflects a variety of factors, some cultural, some political, some economic, and some... some due to the fact that the bulk of the available readers are sold with barely a nod to after sale concerns and no significant support infrastructure that would ensure mainstream readers can effectively use the gadgets to their fullest. Most are in fact limited to use solely as PC Peripherals, which right there excludes a significant portion of the potential market. The most successful mainstream-user readers are those that people can turn on, buy a book, and just read. No need to know what format the book is in, no need to tweak settings, no need to decompile the book, rewrite a CSS, and recompile the book. No need to keep track of device authorizations or whether their PC can even see the reader. I *own* those kinds of readers. And yes, they are "successful" in Asia and other areas. If by success you mean sales by the tens of thousands a month. Kindles, Kobos, and Nooks sell by the hundreds of thousands a month; Kindle is doing over a million a month right about now. And the reason these western readers are successful at those volumes even at current hardware prices is because their vendors are selling ebooks, not hardware. They put their efforts into improving the software, making the firmware rock-solid stable and as crash-proof as humanly possible, and extending the reach of their ebookstore networks. For those readers, the hardware is but the tip of the iceberg. The bulk of the value lies in the unseen software and support areas. When ebook readers offer a compelling story on those issues, *that* is when they are ready to reach out to mainstream consumers, who simply want to *read*. BTW, you mention Russia and the far east. Yes, those are very different "culturally" and the idea of what constitutes a commercial ebook is very different round those parts. That may be the situation forever. Or it might not. It is my understanding that one of the more popular reader lines are the POCKETBOOK series. I own two separate models. They... seem to be having issues of late. Their efforts to expand by focusing on (very good) hardware, releasing five separate new model simultaneously seems to have left them with a lot on their plate trying to get those back-end software and support and stability issues under control. Hopefully they will and soon. But I worry because this kind of over-reach has happened before in other industries and it rarely ends well. It is very early in the history of ebooks and there's no telling how things will stabilize but certain lessons are clear from the past few years. And the biggest lesson so far is that hardware is secondary to the software and both are secondary to the *books*. Don't expect cheap generic "standard" hardware to be with us much longer as anything but a niche product, if that much. The real winners will be those that build solid reading *platforms* and those may be global players or local players but what they won't be is hardware-only. |
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#33 | ||
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Maybe I have over-emphasized the importance of hardware at the expense of authors, publishers and content vendors but I still believe that cheap e-readers are crucial in widespread adoption of ebooks.
My personal opinion is that LCD simply is not an adequate technology for dedicated e-readers, e-ink is. I used to read Mobipocket books on Palm device for many years but then around 2007 I tried to buy a dedicated Ectaco e-reader with a reflective LCD screen for about $100. It was so bad that I returned it the same day. It made no sense to buy a dedicated e-reader when Palm and laptops and nowadays iPhones and iPads and other multifunctional tablets can do the same and much more. The question is: can they make e-ink screens even cheaper than they are now? Maybe manufacturers have hit a wall but it is apparent that some industry players are betting on e-ink proliferation. E-ink readers should come in all sizes and options of additional functionality to fit everyone and it will be too difficult to fulfill by one vendor. You are right about simplicity but it is achievable through well established open standards as well, not with proprietary platforms. The comparison with cell-phones is justified. You buy any cellphone you like out of hundreds of models available, insert your SIM card and start making calls. Transferring the contact list to the new phone is the greatest hurdle in this process. Why it should be different with books? You buy an e-reader, go online (through WiFi, 3G or via computer), enter your password for your bookstore(s) (Amazon, Kobo, etc.), deregister the old device if required and continue reading your books as before. Any other functions will be secondary and non-essential. Kindle sells best because of lower price only. Pocketbooks and others are still too expensive for masses. They are not on the level of cheap cellphones yet. In either case I suspect that in Russia most ebooks read on these devices are non-DRM works, publicly available, i.e., from lib.ru , or otherwise. If e-ink prices fall, Kindle loses its edge. Quote:
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#34 | |||||
Interested Bystander
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A big selling point of Kindles is that they do work exactly as you described above to access books from Amazon, and other eInk readers do not. Quote:
If a bookstore achieves the sort of market dominance with for-sale content that Amazon have achieved in the US, then their preferred reader will have the edge. Last edited by murraypaul; 03-22-2011 at 11:08 AM. |
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#35 | |||
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I remember that the first cellphone companies in Russia had CDMA networks with operator given handsets and the US pricing model, much like Verizon. They were successful among more wealthy population and the cell phone became a status symbol. But later the GSM networks with prepaid option, free incoming calls and a big second-hand phone market was a killer and suddenly everybody could afford one. At the end all operators had either to switch to GSM standard or remain a niche. But as it is now, even Kindle is too expensive for an average Russian who earns 3-4 times less money than an average American while the amount of books read per year are about the same or even more for Russians. Relationships between time, convenience and price look completely different there. Last edited by karunaji; 03-22-2011 at 12:19 PM. |
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#36 | |
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That is a fallacy. The price point certainly helps, but the important thing is quick and easy, simple, reliable access to Amazon's books.
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#37 |
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#38 | ||
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![]() I have bought e-books from Kobo and a local Latvian bookstore. Maybe it is just me but in all cases the procedure was quite straightforward. You just buy a book on your computer and then connect the Kobo reader to the computer and transfer it. For free and non-DRM content you just use Calibre and transfer it to the device. In fact, using Kindle was more confusing because some books get moved to Archived folder and then I can't access them when away from Wi-Fi hotspot. There is no added value in being able to buy books directly from Kindle because I use Wi-Fi only at home next to my computer anyway. It definitely is not worth $2 per book as buyers in many countries are charged. Quote:
Fonts are there but for commercial product you need more than that. For example, search function in Kindle is meaningless if it doesn't support Russian keyboard. Alphabetic ordering is another issue. Localized version with all menu options translated into local language is preferable. Last edited by karunaji; 03-22-2011 at 04:06 PM. |
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#39 | ||
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With all that in mind, I don't use Amazon myself. I couldn't care less about them failing in some markets. Quote:
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#40 | ||
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#41 |
She-Giles
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It's really not that hard if you team knows what they're doing. Certainly a company such as amazon can afford the salary for one or two linguists/encoding specialists.
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#42 | |
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These issues can be solved with proper changes in UI but usually they are out of scope of translator's direct work. And even if the translator warns the project manager about these issues in most cases they get rejected by the first level managers who do not think that it is important or want to avoid more changes in the product than absolutely necessary. Example from the real life: I noticed that Google maps now shows projected fuel costs when calculating directions. It is a nice function but I found that the results are not very representative if I select my car type according to offered options: Compact/Standard/High Consumption. I have a Standard car but it appears that even "Compact" option calculates slightly more costs than they actually are. Most likely there is a difference what is generally considered a Compact or Standard car type in different countries. But the localization process of big companies is such that it is very hard to make these changes. Even when managers agree nothing gets done without the approval of the legal department and so on. |
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#43 |
She-Giles
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Don't worry, I do get that the people making decisions in the design process of a software are not necessarily fit to make them.
However, you made it seem as if internationalization were tougher on a technical level than it actually is. |
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#44 | |
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What I am saying that what is applicable for one country, will not work in another with a different culture. Basically, it requires starting from the scratch. In most cases it is not worth it. |
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#45 |
She-Giles
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I'm not questioning that argument - I am merely pointing out that internationalization of the GUI and the search function is not as big a deal to experienced programmers as many people seem to think.
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