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#61 |
NewKindler
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Sorry for the long post... maybe I should release it in mobi format
![]() Being a computer tech, I know how easy it is to create and make "something from nothing" in the computer world. For paper books, get a text scanner that scans the pages of a book one by one or maybe 2 at a time, which converts it into either picture or text format (usually with existing OCR techniques), and from there a simple program, which even if it does not exist, can easily be programmed and created to convert that text into any format the ebook company wishes to use. My best explanation for the less technical people: it is the equivalent of using a scanner into photoshop that scans each page with OCR to convert it to text, then use batch scripts to convert the entire deal into a single text file, then converted into whatever format by calibre. At a commercial level, it is much more simplistic than this, the higher end commercial scanners can convert the entire book into a single project with their software as it scans, and then converted once it is done. From start to finish, the cost per ebook if converted from paper, is around $3-5 per book. For newer books in the past 15 years, if the original book or author submitted it via digital format like DOC, TXT, RTF, PDF or something from a computer, it would cost less than 25 cents per ebook. Of course some publishers or authors are requiring some ungodly amount of royalties per copy which is why some ebooks cost $30, and others cost $3. So what we are seeing is several things here, most of which we have seen before and will see again: 1) Resistance to the ebook formats by various people in the publishing industry. Using scare tactics and generalities to scare people into continuing to purchase paper based books. They did the same thing when CD music started getting popular and people were creating ripping programs to mp3. They tried to scare people into continued purchases of physical media like CDs or cassettes. The same thing is happening with movies right now as well. As internet speed and computer speeds increases, it is easier to make personal backups of your collection, which they use scare tactics of pirates, DRM and legal reasoning to fight places like Netflix and Blockbuster and other online streaming sources. 2) They use cherry picked data and numbers to make it appear that they are making little to no money on any ebooks. One company is showing numbers that just in the first 9 months of 2010, there has been $304.6 Million in sales, compared to the entire year of 2009 saw $164.8 million, there is OBVIOUSLY major profits being seen now. B&N stated it had seen a 59% increase of sales for the entire company, a majority of that by digital media. Barnes & Noble comparable instore sales decreased by 3.3%. By comparison, print books still make up the vast majority of the industry's revenues--around $23 billion in 2009, but that number is in decline, while ebook sales increase by over 200% per year. Another company uses different sets of numbers completely which adds to the confusion. Their numbers state US spending on e-books is expected to total $966 million this year, up from $301 million dollars last year. A Forrester survey of e-book readers found that 35 percent read e-books on a laptop computer, 32 percent on Amazon's Kindle, 15 percent on Apple's iPhone, 12 percent on a Sony e-reader and 10 percent on a netbook computer. First one I mentioned: International Digital Publishing Forum in conjunction with the Association of American Publishers (AAP). These are insiders using cherry picked numbers. 2009: $164.8 Million in US sales 2010: $204.6 Million in sales through Oct 2010 Second one I mentioned: Forrester Research Inc. that deals with independent and peer verified data. 2009: $301 Mil 2010: predicts $966 Mil. for the year |
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#62 | |||||
Grand Sorcerer
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They're good. They're not that good. Google's epubs are top of the line for what you can get from automated OCR--and they are riddle with typos, especially on title pages and chapter headings, which often have special fonts, and no automatic OCR program can deal with the weird names & other vocab in science fiction & paranormal stories. Automated OCR has problems with ends of physical pages; they're guessing whether that's a paragraph break or not. Often, they guess wrong. (Well, not quite true. Often, they assume that a page break is a paragraph break, because they've got no way of knowing otherwise. Quote:
The text may have been fine-tuned for printing in ways that won't allow easy conversion; if styles weren't used, formatting could be lost on export, and any odd characters might've been manually placed instead of being part of the in-box text. If they have them in nice sharp print-ready PDFs, converting out of that may wind up putting a hard return at the end of every line of text, depending on what program made the PDFs. Converting from digital files to ebook formats could be done, but each book would need some manual checking: metadata, basic formatting, chapter headers, copyright page formatting. If it had footnotes, those are likely to be a nightmare; some ebook formats (*cough* epub) have no footnote support. Quote:
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I'm not particularly concerned about publishers hiding data about ebook sales, because I know the market is such a tangled mess that it really wouldn't matter if we had accurate numbers. |
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#63 | |||||||
New York Editor
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Depending on the quality of the source scan, there will be more or less errors, but there will be errors, which will require manual proofing against the source text to correct. (Ligatures are a particularly thorny problem.) That costs money. And just getting it to text is insufficient. Once it is text, you need to add markup for things like text attributes and ToC links. There are tools to automate this, too, but they make assumptions about the input file that may not be true. (A good example being GutenMark.) Again, more manual work is required. That costs money. Quote:
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In earlier days, submission was hardcopy. (And nobody submits in PDF. Manuscripts are subject to change, and need to be in a format which can be easily changed.) Quote:
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______ Dennis |
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#64 |
Zealot
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Sorry. I don't buy it. Any publisher selling e-books for as much as hardbacks or in some cases more are money grubbing. I expect an e-book to at MOST to be priced about the same as a mass market paperback. As long as the book is published in paper AND e-book format, the e-book is going to have lower costs. You don't have to proofread and edit the book 2 times, one for the paper release and one for the e-book. No paper cost, no warehousing cost, no extra advertising cost, no shipping cost. A website to sell e-books is rather unlikely to cost more than the distr. and retailer cuts for paper books.
If publishers want to survive they have to stop thinking in horse-and-buggy mode and start thinking in automobile mode. Its adapt or die time. |
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#65 | |
Connoisseur
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#66 | |
Guru
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You see, the essence of that little exercise in wishful thinking is getting rid of these "helpful people", taking away their cut, control over pricing, profits, and all nice games that they play with author on one side, consumers on the other. |
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#67 | ||
Connoisseur
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Here is a nice quote from Cory Doctorow on his latest self-publishing experiment (admittedly dead-tree) from piece on the PW website here. Quote:
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#68 | |
Guru
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A good admin definitely costs less than mentioned "helpful people" under the current system, and who authors decide to bring on board, and how they decide to run their business and spend the money is up to them. A sticker from big name of the publishing industry, especially the "big five" behind the agency pricing scam is undesirable ballast, a dinosaur destined for extinction. I prefer to support art, not "the industry". |
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#69 | ||
New York Editor
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A book contract is a license. The publisher licenses the rights to issue a book, in forms specified by the contract, for a period specified by the contract. The form may be hardcover, trade paperback, mass market paperback, print-on-demand edition, ebook, or some combination of the above. The period is governed by sales. If the book is allowed to go out of print (and the contract will define levels of ebook and print-on-demand sales that qualify as still in print), the author may ask that the rights revert, and attempt to resell the book to another publisher or self-publish. The authors retain any rights not specifically covered in the contract, like foreign rights (sales to a foreign publisher) and movie and TV adaptation rights. Quote:
Artists want to create art, and get paid enough to make a living doing it. A writer simply wants to write books, and hopefully make enough to earn a living doing it. Most don't want to do all of the other things needed to get the book to a form others can read, and may be no good at them if they try. It's why we have an industry: agents to represent their work to publishers interested in try to sell what they do, editors to work with them to make the finished product as good as possible, artists to create covers with compelling images to get people to look at (and possibly buy) the book, people to prepare the final manuscript for publication in print or electronic format, printers to print and bind the printed version and bookstores to sell it, as well as web vendors to provide the electronic versions. All of those "helpful people" you denigrate are helpful - if they weren't there, the book would never reach you. Assuming all authors can take the kind of control you posit is wildly optimistic. Assuming they should want to is profoundly silly. Most writers would rather spend their time and effort writing. ______ Dennis |
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#70 | ||
New York Editor
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Most of this sort of discussion is colored by them. The hardcover makes the most revenue and carries the highest margins. The presence of hardcover bestsellers may make the difference between a publisher showing a profit for the year or taking a loss. Let's say a new book is out in both hardcover and ebook format. What do you think the price should be for the ebook? If you say "No more than the mass market paperback", expect people involved in the process to point at you and laugh. It's reasonable to expect no more than MMPB prices for an ebook of a book that is out in MMPB format. Expecting it for a book out in hardcover, competing with the hardcover is going some, even for wishful thinking. For pure print books, people who don't want to pay the higher price for the hardcover wait for the MMPB. Expect the same with ebooks. Want it cheap? Expect to wait for it. Want it now? Expect to pay a premium for early access. ______ Dennis |
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#71 |
Wizard
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DMcCunney, nicely put, a refreshing touch of reality... be careful the "idealists" will be out to get you...
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#72 | ||
Guru
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The essential services that are involved in ePub production are very light, and the lion's share of the end product goes to the authors and those who deal with the story itself. First author, editors, proof-readers. Add to that formatting, cover art. Come hell or high water these costs will be recognized by the market and the price of the end good MUST cover for them, or there will be no ebooks. The printing part of the business might easily go the Lulu route, print on demand. Quote:
BTW, I am not writing these posts out of some abstract idealism. This is a straight application of similar predictions for my very own profession, where we might easily end up in "contractor economy". We might easily lose the permanency of our jobs and be employed on per product, or project, basis. It is more cost-effective model, and long-term planning has long time ago been thrown out, to make space for any possible optimization and quick profit in return. |
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#73 |
Argos win Grey Cup!
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#74 | ||
Grand Master of Flowers
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I'm not thrilled with this approach, but it has obviously been very successful so far. Someone actually does know what they are doing. Quote:
Some indie authors will undoubtedly find success self-publishing, and some established authors who have lost their publishing deals may go this way as well. But just as podiobooks.com has not hurt audible.com at all (if anything, it has probably driven people to audible), indie books aren't going to drive people away from traditionally published books. What people want, and will pay for, are high quality well-edited books. Traditional publishers are and will remain the source of these books because there's not really another option. (As even Cory Doctorow's experiment seems to have shown.) |
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#75 | |
Guru
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