Okay, I'm going to ramble (I almost always do) so just hang in there and I'll probably get around to what I want to say.
I find the ebook thing very....interesting. I will be the first to admit, in my lust to get books, I have in the past *cough* obtained *cough* them from certain websites as .pdf or .html files and read them on my computer. I will not spend my time trying to defend myself, but I'll just say that I'm done downloading books. Authors need to be compensated, or I need to get my butt to the library.
I remember trying to read an e-book. I am never doing that again. They will have to pry my books from my cold dead hands. I say this, knowing very well that books take up space. I have a lot of them. I also move a lot (being a student), and I know that would be very much easier with an e-book reader. But. Never going to happen. I have a very tactile and olfactory relationship with books.
That said, the experience I had reading books off the computer screen was....not really that bad at all. I actually liked it. So, I'm assuming I'll be the perfect candidate for something like a Kindle. Mind you, I won't be buying a kindle or anything else until we settle on a format that can be read by ALL ebook readers. Proprietary=no no.
There is of course also that, but that is a side point for me.
So, all that said, I wonder how authors feel about the kindle, and about ebooks in general.
On the one hand, it might be argued that they won't make as much because they're not selling hardbacks at $25 a piece.
On the other hand, it might also be argued that if they really have a great piece of fiction they could stand to make even more because the entry price is lower. The Kindle sells books at $10 a piece, even brand new, and this appeals to be as a consumer.
Ah. You forget the midlist novel. And you are assuming that quality and quantity go hand in hand. Both bad moves.
On a third, and strangely smelly hand, I'd say that's only true for consumers that have a fair chunk of cash in the first place, because those Kindles don't grow on trees.
On a fourth, quiet and misunderstood hand that lives in its parent hands' basement, the electronic format could potentially be seen as somewhat of a revolution for the small-timers out there that want to get a book published. They've got something really great, and maybe they won't even have to have a publisher in the near future?
No. See, here be a problem. Publishers are a good thing. They come with editors. Editors are good for authors.
However, having people publish whatever they want could possibly just spell doom for the universe.
Not doom, but probably less quality.
Your thoughts?
I dropped them above. I am not a fan. I think it a bad thing. I mean, not necessarily evil (as it would seem to have some uses), but nothing I would want to be the standard of the book market.
Incidentally, since I appear to be linking Nick Harkaway's blog a lot, here are a couple of links:
http://www.nickharkaway.com/2009/07/insulting/
http://www.nickharkaway.com/2009/07/ebooksii-epistle/
*MySmiley*
structured procrastinator
structured procrastinator
Let's Discuss: Ebooks
03/09/2009 06:19:42 PM
- 1358 Views
I don't think I could ever use Ebooks.
03/09/2009 06:51:47 PM
- 824 Views
It's not necessarily one or the other.
03/09/2009 07:32:56 PM
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This is so.
03/09/2009 07:53:41 PM
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You probably will be able to soon.
03/09/2009 07:58:52 PM
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You can with some of the more expensive models.
03/09/2009 11:19:01 PM
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Ideally, universities will start renting out eTextbook readers, or something. *NM*
03/09/2009 11:30:29 PM
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That'd be great. My school rents out standard ebook readers now, so it won't be long. *NM*
03/09/2009 11:32:27 PM
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Re: This is so.
03/09/2009 09:02:21 PM
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Regarding pricing...
03/09/2009 07:40:02 PM
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Not so
03/09/2009 09:01:32 PM
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That's a fairly horrible blog post.
03/09/2009 11:05:22 PM
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Re: Let's Discuss: Ebooks
03/09/2009 08:42:26 PM
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Now that is a clever idea.
03/09/2009 11:14:07 PM
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Amazon has actually been using that idea for a while now, in a limited sense.
03/09/2009 11:22:00 PM
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I cannot stand them.
03/09/2009 08:59:03 PM
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Regarding the "Insulting" blog...
03/09/2009 10:22:43 PM
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Re: " I have a very tactile and olfactory relationship with books."
04/09/2009 09:38:22 AM
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This. . .is quite long. I feel pretty strongly about this subject.
03/09/2009 11:14:11 PM
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No, it's a cool post.
03/09/2009 11:29:33 PM
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More than fair.
03/09/2009 11:39:29 PM
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lovely! this is what i would have wanted to say had i gotten here earlier...
04/09/2009 12:44:55 AM
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Thank you for the education. I had a completely different idea as to what e-books were.
04/09/2009 09:35:11 AM
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No problem. And thanks!
04/09/2009 03:15:14 PM
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A possible selling point for me was when you said it was lighter than a paperback
05/09/2009 12:25:18 AM
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Re: Let's Discuss: Ebooks
04/09/2009 01:39:31 AM
- 965 Views
I hate ebooks and everything they represent
04/09/2009 03:50:48 AM
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Hold on a moment now.
04/09/2009 06:28:09 AM
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Your logic is seriously flawed
04/09/2009 02:28:21 PM
- 1185 Views
I see your sceneclips, and raise you a New York Times.
04/09/2009 02:59:33 PM
- 991 Views
You have an almost cult-like enthusiasm for e-books.
06/09/2009 12:53:04 AM
- 919 Views
Perhaps you mis-read the graph.
04/09/2009 03:14:06 PM
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No, I didn't mis-read the graph.
06/09/2009 12:56:15 AM
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You must be talking percentage of the population who attend theaters? *NM*
06/09/2009 05:26:43 AM
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I don't have any fancy reasons for you.
05/09/2009 01:47:09 AM
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Craig, you're incredibly interesting
05/09/2009 01:59:27 AM
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... Are you hitting on me?
05/09/2009 03:02:06 AM
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