Posts Tagged ‘e-book’

E-Books Prices Rise – What Will Consumers Do?

February 11th, 2010

It stands to reason that e-books should be cheaper than regular books, but it seems that the publishing companies disagree. According to the New York Times, the prices of e-books are going to rise. The consumers, obviously, aren’t going to be happy about it:

But now, with e-books scheduled to cost $12.99 to $14.99 under new deals that publishers negotiated with Apple and Amazon, a broader swath of customers may resist the new pricing. The higher prices will go into effect within the next few months.

Read the full article: E-Book Price Increase May Stir Readers’ Passions

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Asus to Launch E-book Reader

January 31st, 2010

Looks like everybody wants one – an e-book reader. This time it’s Asus, who’s going to launch a 9-inch reader, called the DR-950.

Asus’ reader has grayscale touch screen with a resolution of 1024×768 , it is 9mm thick and weighs 370 grams. This reader should be available with 2 or 4GB of internal memory, SD card slot, WiFi and HSDPA, optional WiMAX, integrated stereo speakers, 3.5mm audio jack and an USB port.

The  DR-950 by Asus will support PDF, TXT, Audible, MP3, HTML documents and the common image file formats.

There is still no official information about the launch date and the prices.

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War of the e-books: Amazon Removes Macmillan Books

January 30th, 2010

Apple’s iPad was launched a few days ago and the war in the e-book arena quickly escalated.

Amazon has pulled all Macmillan books from its online store. Macmillan is a big publisher and includes publishing houses Henry Holt & Co., science fiction-focused Tor/Forge and the Tiffany of fiction, Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

It seems that Amazon and Macmillan were in disagreement as to the price of e-books sold for the Kindle. Amazon wants a price of $9.99 for Kindle e-books, but the publishers aren’t happy with this demand and would like, of course, to sell their e-books for higher prices.

Amazon could put a lot of pressure on publishers right up until Wednesday, the day of the iPad’s launch. Now the e-book arena has a set of different rules. Sure enough, the publishers didn’t wait. Five publishers were announced to be working with Apple; Macmillan is one of them.

Amazon still has dangerous ammunition, though: all formats of Macmillan books are now unavailable for purchase from the online giant. This can be very bad for the publisher.

It’s hard to predict who will win this battle. After all, there are quite a few online retailers that sell books. If a shopper is really eager to get a certain book, he will find it in a myriad of shops. On the other hand, Amazon has very effective marketing tactics, and buyers may simply be tempted to buy a different book or product. It seems that cooperation is in the interest of both sides and that a compromise will be reached, eventually.

In the mean time, let’s hope that good, fierce competition between different platforms will benefit us, the clients.

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