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Kindle, iPad, MacMillan, and the Death of a Business Model
Pajamas Media ^ | Feb. 2 | Charlie MArtin

Posted on 02/02/2010 10:15:39 AM PST by AJKauf

f you visited Amazon.com this weekend, hoping to buy a book that happened to have been published by MacMillan, you got a rude surprise. You couldn’t do it. Whether you hoped to buy an e-book for the Kindle, or an old-fashioned physical book, Amazon wouldn’t sell it to you. In a protest against the pricing model that MacMillan and other publishers had negotiated with Apple for the iBookstore, Amazon simply removed the “buy” button from MacMillan’s books.

The protest didn’t last very long — just long enough to be noticed and to make the New York Times on the evening of January 29....

(Excerpt) Read more at pajamasmedia.com ...


TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: amazon; amazondotcom; barnesandnoble; bezos; bookpublishers; bookpublishing; books; ebooks; ipad; jeffbezos; macmillan; nook
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1 posted on 02/02/2010 10:15:40 AM PST by AJKauf
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To: AJKauf

I am writing an online ‘college’ paper on this topic.

Why the government should not “bailout” print newspapers.


2 posted on 02/02/2010 10:17:08 AM PST by GeronL (http://tyrannysentinel.blogspot.com)
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To: AJKauf

Sounds like Amazon is going to play hardball. Who would have thought a business would fight hard to save its business? Shoosh - big news.


3 posted on 02/02/2010 10:17:26 AM PST by equalitybeforethelaw
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To: AJKauf

The publishers are going to shoot themselves in the foot.
If they start charging ridiculous prices for e-books, people will start “discovering” usenet.


4 posted on 02/02/2010 10:21:28 AM PST by astyanax (Liberalism: Logic's retarded cousin.)
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To: AJKauf

Just some random thoughts on this. I have been contemplating the purchase of a Kindle. I know lots of folks like the feel of real books and are anti-ereader as a result. While I have lots of hard copy books that I dearly love, there are a lot of things I would love to read that I don’t want taking up space in my home permanently. I like the idea of picking up a an ebook at a discounted price and giving it a whirl. If I don’t like it, I haven’t thrown $30 down the crapper. I bet I would read more with an ereader than I do now. The death of one business model gives rise to the next. CD sales have plummeted since the advent of digital music, doesn’t it make sense that books will follow the same path?


5 posted on 02/02/2010 10:45:44 AM PST by Juana la Loca
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To: Juana la Loca

I have a Kindle DX, and with it installed in its cover it is almost like reading a paper book. Except for pressing the “Next Page” button.


6 posted on 02/02/2010 11:02:27 AM PST by PogySailor (We're so screwed.....welcome to the American Oligarchy)
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To: Juana la Loca
The death of one business model gives rise to the next. CD sales have plummeted since the advent of digital music, doesn’t it make sense that books will follow the same path?

The difference is, most CDs are complete ephemera. And while many mass market paperback books fall into the same category, scholarly and professional books do not.

Lots of libraries fell into the trap of electronic media being the wave of the future 15 years ago. Now, many of them are stuck with legacy data in archaic formats that are increasingly hard to access. Personally, I want a book I buy to be easily accessible to me 10, 15, 20 years from now. Can anyone assure me that a Kindle/iPad/Nook book that I buy today will still be readable?
7 posted on 02/02/2010 11:14:45 AM PST by Antoninus (The RNC's dream ticket: Romney / Scozzafava 2012)
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To: Antoninus
Can anyone assure me that a Kindle/iPad/Nook book that I buy today will still be readable?

I think I've got an assurance like that in writing somewhere... ah, here it is. Can you open a WordStar file?

8 posted on 02/02/2010 11:18:11 AM PST by r9etb
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To: AJKauf

All I want to do ...is download a pdf to a usb stick...and plug it in to a reader...so I can read it...or have it read to me if I’m in the car. that’s it.


9 posted on 02/02/2010 11:28:10 AM PST by mo
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To: Juana la Loca
I bought a Kindle about a year ago. Then, later, I bought the Kindle DX. I have a large library in my home, but the Kindles are getting more use than the paper books: (1) the Kindle is easier to read, because I can adjust the type size to my liking, and the Kindle is typically lighter than a physical book, (2) the Kindle remembers where I left off in a book and takes me there when I return, which is useful when you read a dozen books at the same time. The Kindles automatically synchronize themselves so that I am am able to pick up one and start where I left off on the other. (3) The Kindle will hold about 1500 books at the same time, so you can carry a substantial collection with you as conveniently as you might carry one small paperback. (4) I can buy an eBook on the Kindle practically anywhere. For instance, I was reading a NYT book review and liked what I read. I pulled out the Kindle, ordered the book, and in 30 seconds it was in my Kindle waiting to be read. I could go on, but those are the Kindle's main attractions.

On the con side, the Kindle is B&W, and pictures come out so poorly as to be unusable. Reading an art history book on the Kindle, for example, would be pointless. This is why when the iTablet comes out, I'll buy one at once. I am very impressed with the way Amazon has organized the Kindle, and I hope that one day soon there will be a color Kindle comparable to the iTablet.

10 posted on 02/02/2010 11:30:17 AM PST by PUGACHEV
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To: GeronL

If you’re writing a college paper on this, let me correct your grammar.

“Bailout” is a noun; “bail out” is a verb.

Unless you live in the UK or Canada, the single quote marks should be double quote marks in your first sentence. Not sure why “college” would be in scare quotes, though.

Your second sentence is a fragment, which is fine if the previous sentence ended in a colon rather than a period, but incorrect if it’s just standing there on its own ...


11 posted on 02/02/2010 11:46:11 AM PST by Theo (May Rome decrease and Christ increase.)
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To: Juana la Loca
I just bought 119 books on amazon last Sunday. Total cost to me ? $8.93. I bought all 20 volumes of the English translation of the Babylonian Talmud for .99, plus 25 folklore and mythology texts as 1 purchase for 1.99. (That included the full text of the Mabinogion, Wirt Sikes' British Goblins ,( a book on Welsh folklore and folklife), Yeats' Celtic Twilight,some of Lady Gregory's translations of Celtic myths and legends...) . Most expensive books I bought were The Mythic and Magickal Folklore of Plants by T. F. Thiselton-Dyer for $3.94, and Manly Hall's The Secret Teachings of All Ages for $2.99. (I couldn't pass up a title like that!) All the other books were completely free, including all 6 books-the complete text-of Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, the Kalevala, and the original Anglo-Saxon Beowulf. Lots of great public domain downloads for free, all categories of both nonfiction and fiction .

I love my kindle, and next time I go on vacation , it and maybe my netbook alone will go along. No more lugging 5-6 books in a giant bookbag in case I get bored or there's a delay-not when I can take a whole library of hundreds of books with me!

PS. Even many of the cheap (5.00 and under) downloads will send you a few sample pages on request before you buy,not to mention the 9.99 full price books. So there's minimal risk of buying a book and then not liking it...Not that at, eg, 1.99 for Macculloch's Religion of the Ancient Celts that the risk was too great in the first place! :-D

12 posted on 02/02/2010 11:53:19 AM PST by kaylar (It's MARTIAL law. Not marshal(l) or marital-MARTIAL! This has been a spelling PSA.)
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To: mo
Me, too. I have dozens of googlebook* pdf downloads on my netbook. I'd love to convert them to kindle format and put them on my kindle and forget the netbook, but so far the "mobi conversion" hasn't worked AT ALL :-(

* I also have a few pdf downloads from project gutenberg, but I don't like their formatting as much as I like google's .

13 posted on 02/02/2010 11:59:16 AM PST by kaylar (It's MARTIAL law. Not marshal(l) or marital-MARTIAL! This has been a spelling PSA.)
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To: Theo

lol!


14 posted on 02/02/2010 11:59:48 AM PST by GeronL (http://tyrannysentinel.blogspot.com)
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To: GeronL

;-)

Thanks for taking my “correction” as I meant it: light-hearted.


15 posted on 02/02/2010 1:29:48 PM PST by Theo (May Rome decrease and Christ increase.)
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To: PUGACHEV
which is useful when you read a dozen books at the same time.

A person who is like me! Only mine are piled all over the house. I've been wanting a Kindle forever for that very reason.

16 posted on 02/02/2010 1:34:33 PM PST by keepitreal ( Don't tread on me.)
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To: Theo

Hey, if I learn something I’m happy.


17 posted on 02/02/2010 1:52:47 PM PST by GeronL (http://tyrannysentinel.blogspot.com)
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To: Juana la Loca

I received a Kindle for Christmas, 2008, not long after they went on sale. In my life I have received 2 really wonderful Christmas gifts, gifts that I continued to enjoy long after the Holidays. The first was my bike when I was 8 years old. The second is my Kindle. Access to virtually every book I could ever want to read, at any time I wanted them, from anyplace I was at, is just a wonderful gift. Additonally, Kindle will allow you to download a sample of each book, about the first 100 pages, for free. Like you can buy the entire book, don’t like it then delete and it costs nothing.


18 posted on 02/02/2010 6:00:29 PM PST by ops33 (Senior Master Sergeant, USAF (Retired))
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To: kaylar
Do you use calibre? It's a free download and is how I converted most of my e-stuff to my Kindle when I first got it. Works great for me and the amount of content (newspapers, mags, some blogs) it will “fetch” from the net and convert automatically for usb transfer is great. Again - all free.
19 posted on 02/06/2010 5:25:03 PM PST by VRWCtaz (America has Zero to be ashamed of.)
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To: VRWCtaz

I’ve never heard of it-I’ll look into it. I’d dearly love to transfer all those pdf’s to the kindle so I’d only need ONE device.


20 posted on 02/06/2010 5:29:45 PM PST by kaylar (It's MARTIAL law. Not marshal(l) or marital-MARTIAL! This has been a spelling PSA.)
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