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#166 | |
Kindlephilia
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Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Snowpacolypse 2010
Device: Too many to count
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#167 |
Wizard
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Join Date: Sep 2009
Device: PRS-505
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#168 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Linköpng, Sweden
Device: Kindle Voyage, Nexus 5, Kindle PW
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#169 | ||
Professional Contrarian
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Join Date: Mar 2009
Device: Kindle 4 No Touchie
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The unanswered question is whether chopping 33-50% off of the consumer price is going to lead to a commensurate increase in revenues and/or profits. But in the end, I'm not sure all this brouhaha will really matter that much. If people are truly unwilling to buy ebooks at $15, sales will plummet and the price will get adjusted anyway. Similarly, if $10 is a truly unsustainable price, then retailers won't be able to offer it often or for long. Although I don't believe in a "perfect" price, I do think it's difficult to maintain a price that is too far from what people are willing to pay. Quote:
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#170 |
Wizard
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Karma: 8059866
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Canada
Device: Kobo H2O / Aura HD / Glo / iPad3
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#171 |
Wizard
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Karma: 8059866
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Canada
Device: Kobo H2O / Aura HD / Glo / iPad3
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From a business viewpoint I have to admire what Steve Jobs has done. If you can't sign a good deal then sign a bad deal under the condition they match it with Amazon.
When I was watching the iPad announcement and he threw up the picture of the Kindle I was expecting him to do the typical product comparison/bashing. I was surprised that he just said that Apple was going to stand on the shoulders of what Amazon accomplished. I guess what he meant was they were going to stand on their shoulders and kick them in the head. |
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#172 | |
Which side are you on?
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Karma: 1964
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Variable, currently Czestochowa, Poland.
Device: Kindle 2 Int'l
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With no content, your hardware is just a paperweight, and if you sell somebody the hardware you've probably got them as a customer for content. Apple saw that synergy with music but dropped the ball completely on books. Amazon picked it up and ran with it, and now Apple's moving to intercept before they get completely shut out of the game. |
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#173 |
Quilt Geek
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Lancaster, PA
Device: Kindle
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Joe Konrath has a great blog post breaking down the current situation from the point of view of an author (lots of authors are blogging on this, of course). What I found especially interesting was the summary he receives from Amazon listing his book sales, all of which is extra money since his publisher wasn't interested in the out-of-print books. With Amazon DTP as his publisher, he earns almost as much on a $2.99 Kindle book as he does on a $24.95 hardcover. At current sales rates, when the new Amazon 70/30 split comes into effect in June, he figures he'll be grossing 40K per year, on titles his publisher didn't want. That's not too shabby.
With the history of the music and movie industries to study, the story of how the publishers can get themselves into this sort of a mess would probably make for good reading ![]() Last edited by tlrowley; 01-31-2010 at 01:33 PM. |
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#174 | |
Maria Schneider
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Near Austin, Texas
Device: 3g Kindle Keyboard
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Amazon also offers the opportunity for authors to restrict geographically or not. So...while they may wish to dominate, they have opened up the field as well. |
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#175 | |
Jeffrey A. Carver
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Massachusetts, USA
Device: Lenovo Yoga Tab Plus, Droid phone, Nook HD+
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If you look at the E-reads section at Fictionwise and Webscription, you'll see that all their books are multiformat, DRM-free. The same books in the Kindle store carry DRM. That's not because they want it, it's because they submit to Amazon through the Mobipocket store, and they're given no choice. Same with Sony, and I presume B&N. One of the holdups on Tor ebooks was that they were trying to work out DRM-free distribution deals, and it was hard. (So I was told by a Tor staffer.) I think you're right about the TTS function, though I don't know if an actual mechanism is in place to turn that on and off. |
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#176 | ||
Professional Contrarian
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Karma: 3289631
Join Date: Mar 2009
Device: Kindle 4 No Touchie
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![]() Bezos has publicly and explicitly stated that Amazon's intent is for both the devices and the content to earn a profit. They did not want to go for the "cell phone model" (where the device is subsidized by content revenues and/or enforced contracts) or the "iPod model" (where content is subsidized by hardware sales). As a result, you have Kindle apps for multiple devices, including ones that would otherwise present a competitive challenge (e.g. iPhone, iPad etc). That could change, but so far it seems to still be the case. In comparison: ![]() In Q4 2009, Apple generated approximately $9 billion on iPhones and iPods, but only $1 billion on all iTunes store sales. iTunes revenues have been flat for years, while iPhone revenues in particular have expanded dramatically. And note that is revenues, not profits; i.e. they don't have to fork over 70% of their hardware revenues to 3rd party content providers. Again, I don't think Apple is going to treat all that content as loss leaders, but I have little doubt they view selling the iPad itself as a much higher priority than selling ebooks. To Apple, ebooks are just one of many things you can buy for your iPad, and by setting up their own store they gain a higher level of control over the experience. (I'm mildly surprised they even set up their own ebook store.) At a minimum, they aren't worried about beating the ebook content competition on price. It's pretty well understood that at its core, Apple is a hardware company, and it views software and content as a means to drive hardware sales. The revenue figures and trends should make that very clear. That's a primary reason why they didn't turn into a software company like Microsoft; why Jobs put the brakes on "Macintosh clones;" why they go for vendor lock-in; why they aren't likely to produce a netbook or a cheap desktop (it would cannibalize higher-margin sales) and so forth. Quote:
The ebook market it still small, and "first-mover advantage" is largely superfluous -- as Sony, who entered the ebook reader market years before Amazon, can attest. ![]() |
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#177 | ||
Connoisseur
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Karma: 526
Join Date: Jan 2010
Device: Sony PSP, Palm TX
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The difference with the iPad is that it is not strictly a situation of 'no content'. Apple could just release the iPad and go with the Kobobooks Reader or the B&N Reader or the Stanza Reader for those who are knowledgeable. iBooks exists, in my opinion, to offer one-stop-shopping, a 'smooth purchase process'. eBook formats and DRM are a complete mess right now and Apple recognizes what Amazon has done to smooth out the kinks for its own customers. In fact it could be argued iBooks exists to lower costs to Apple's iPad Customer Service Department - because without iBooks Apple was looking at having to foot the bill for educating the public on how to load eBooks onto their iPads using a process that Apple did not control. Now all Apple has to do is create a web page of instructions for how to purchase with iBooks and tell the customer to wait for their favorite novel to come out on iBooks, not explain how to get the customer's favorite eNovel over at Sony onto their iPad. Last edited by BWhite; 01-31-2010 at 02:58 PM. |
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#178 | ||
ZCD BombShel
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Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: The Frozen North (aka Illinois, USA)
Device: iPad, STB Kindle Oasis
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See above. From my limited research on this - they're one of the very worst offenders about this. That's what scares me. They really do not care about ebooks and people who choose to read ebooks. So they aren't going to be in any hurry to get those books back on Amazon or anywhere else. |
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#179 | ||
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Join Date: Oct 2008
Device: never enough
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#180 |
Grandma Aubbie
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Karma: 229
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Southwest Kansas
Device: sony 600
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Hardback - right now???
For years I have waited for the paperback edition of most books - or checked the hardcovers out of the library. Only a few books that I KNEW I wanted to keep were worth the extra cost.
So now, some of my favorite authors have some "hardcover" books out. They aren't New York Times bestsellers yet, but they ARE about 1/2 of the hardcover price in electronic format, so they are tempting. At the moment, I'm simply waiting for the price to drop to $9.99 to add them to my Sony. Previously, I would have simply waited until they were available in paperback format, or even waited till I could pick them up at a used book store. My point is that I have a price limit that I use in buying books. I won't buy it until it's in a reasonable price range for me. When it is a reasonable price I will buy it. It's that simple. |
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