Posted on 12/16/2009 6:28:30 AM PST by SonOfDarkSkies
Ever since electronic books emerged as a major growth market, New Yorks largest publishing houses have worried that big-name authors might sign deals directly with e-book retailers or other new ventures, bypassing traditional publishers entirely.
Now, one well-known author is doing just that.
Stephen R. Covey, one of the most successful business authors of the last two decades, has moved e-book rights for two of his best-selling books from his print publisher, Simon & Schuster, a division of the CBS Corporation, to a digital publisher that will sell the e-books to Amazon.com for one year.
...
The move promises to raise the already high anxiety level among publishers about the economics of digital publishing and could offer authors a way to earn more profits from their works than they do under the traditional system.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
So, if you download the kindle-ebook from Amazon to your computer, how does it get from the computer to the actual Kindle? Is that a simple upload from the computer to the Kindle or does it work via a memory card? Then, when you've maxed out the Kindle, is there a delete function to create more room, or do you simply remove the memory card and delete it from there?
As you can see, I have no knowledge or experience with any kind of ebook reader. I know that I could (and probably should) go online to do my own research, but, with the number of FReepers out there who appear to have these (in one brand or another), I'm hoping that enough out there will share their specific guidance and opinions with me.
Thanks to all who do ...
I've finally found the perfect e-reader....the ASUS EEE-PC T91MT tablet netbook. When folded into "tablet" orientation, it is the exact same size as a "trade paperback". Running Window 7, I've got FBreader, Kindle for PC, Microsoft Reader, Mobipocket all installed. With Adobe and Windows Notepad, I can read pretty much anything I can get in an electronic format.
Any author who doesn't have a website and a contract requirement that "e-rights" revert back to him/her if his book goes "out of print" is nuts.
See post 22.
As you can see, I have no knowledge or experience with any kind of ebook reader. I know that I could (and probably should) go online to do my own research, but, with the number of FReepers out there who appear to have these (in one brand or another), I'm hoping that enough out there will share their specific guidance and opinions with me.
If you download an ebook to your computer from Amazon, you can then download it from your computer to your Kindle. The Kindle II, which I have, has a 1,000 book internal memory, but neither uses nor accepts memory cards. You can delete ebooks from your Kindle any time you want to, not just wehen the memory's maxed out. Once an ebook is deleted, it automatically returns to your archive at Amazon, from which it can be recovered at any time without any additional charge. Thus, you don't lose any of the books you've bought and can literally have a truck load of them sitting, available, at Amazon, in addition the the 1,000 you have on your Kindle.
Baen Books (sci-fi publisher) already has the first few chapters of each book on its website for free. If you like'em, buy the book (either paper or e-book). And no DRM (digital rights management) bullbleep, either. Baen ebooks are avaialbe in many formats, including epub.
Thanks for the ping, WW!!
Very interesting! I’ll check them out!
The “Daily Edition” is Sony’s newest eReader but it’s backordered until after Christmas; it’s also $399. Ouch.
The Daily version has wifi using the AT&T network (you don’t get charged wireless time, it’s included with the price of the reader). You can also subscribe to newspapers with it. The Reader Touch has to be synced with a computer.
There’s lots of options out there and more to come. I chose the Sony because you can read just about anything. It comes with an MP3 player so you can listen AND read, and takes SD cards.
Read as many reviews as possible before you buy. All the readers seem to have their pros and cons. I would love to have an e-reader, but I don’t think they have worked out all the bugs yet.
I thought about a netbook, but my husband wanted an eReader because he works on a laptop all day. The eInk is less of a strain on your eyes. Besides, reading in bed with a netbook isn't what he has in mind. ;-)
There is also an iPod Touch app called "Stanza" which lets you read books in some other formats, including the free out of copyright books on Project Guttenberg.
The iPod Touch may be too small for some, but it's OK and I like the ability to stick it in my pocket and also to be able to run third party apps on it, where the Kindle is more locked down.
I think the Kindle is a better device for pure reading, but I get by with the iPod Touch.
I don’t know. There is something very special about opening up the pages of a brand new book. Not to be disappointed with new and fantastic technologies, but words printed on a page just feel better to me. :)
Thank you very much ...
Thanks hp. There’s no upside to exclusivity, unless of course the Kindle app continues to work on the iPhone and the rumored Apple tablet computer coming in rumored to be coming in 2010.
I thought I’d post this since it’s very relevant to the conversation:
“Ads Coming to e-Books?”
http://jkontherun.com/2009/12/16/ads-coming-to-e-books/?utm_source=gigaom&utm_medium=recent-posts
VERY very scary thought. I hope it’s never implemented!
For example, in an efficient market, if buyers hate advertisements, they will buy downloads that don't insert them at a greater rate than they they buy those that do. This will exert a downward price pressure on those who do insert adverts and will discourage their use.
That said, what the eBook market seems to promise is a freer market for books.
Indeed, one can envision ultimately a market in which authors bypasses all intermediaries and offer their books for download on their sites (or perhaps at sites that group authors by genre and present reader reviews).
That said, such will probably be a "print upon order" business instead of "print in advance of sale"...and the price will more directly reflect the real cost of printing, binding, and paper since the market/sale risk will be eliminated.
I just wish they had the option of lighting up (for reading in dark places). I know that they do not because of the increased eye strain, but I would like that option. I love to read when my husband is driving, but if we are out and about after 5:00 pm in the winter, I am out of luck.
I might not end up buying one for this very reason. I generally read late at night and so that means lights out except for a reading light.
Originally I assumed that they were backlit but now I understand why they aren't. I don't read that much during the day, I'm too busy FReeping. ;0)So that's a big consideration - how do I light it at night and is it worth it?
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