Under a Gibbous Moon

Tag: eBook

The iPad is not a eReader

by on Apr.05, 2010, under Rant, Technology

I don’t give a shit about the iPad one way or the other. To me it seems like a underpowered, under-featured  and overpriced laptop, but the thing that keeps pissing me off is how tech magazines and blogs seem to act like this device will dethrone the Kindle as the eBook king and lead a new revolution in the technology.

This is strange since, last time I checked, the iPad would be a step backwards. The hole point of the E Ink technology was to create a display that was actually easy to read. Anyone who uses a computer for an extended period of time knows the kind of headaches reading on a monitor can cause.

It’s no surprise since you are essentially staring into a low powered lamp. Now, though, the pundits think that people will go scrambling back to read while staring into the sun. I’ve even read that school are interested in replacing textbooks with iPads.

First, this is awesome because I want a $600 dollar device to read my $100 book and don’t tell me they’ll cut the price for the electronic version, they’ll just add a few hyperlinks and call it the enhanced edition (not to mention killing the used market). And second, since students (well not frat boys) spend hours and hours studying their textbooks I’m sure they’ll appreciate the added eyestrain.

The iPad may be everything to everybody but it’s not a goddamned eBook reader. Stop acting like it is.

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Zero margin publishing helps low demand books

by on Feb.17, 2010, under Technology

I’m certain that by now we’ve all heard about the spat between Amazon and Macmillian Publishing over the pricing of eBooks. If not, Macmillian demanded the right to set the price on their eBooks to whatever they felt like and Amazon wanted them capped at $9.99. After an ugly back and forth, Macmillian won.

But this isn’t about that. There’s nothing particularly wrong with Macmillian trying to see what the market will bear with regards to newly published eBooks. What I find far more interesting is how eBooks will bring new life to a different market, low demand and out of print books.

Printing books is an expensive business. There’s the cost of paper and covers, ink and binding. After all that, they have to be shipped to the point of sale. All this means is that for anything to get published, a certain demand must be anticipated. This goes not only for new books but also for older ones. Today’s best seller is tomorrows bargain bin special.

Eventually, and this will vary from title to title, nearly all books will reach the threshold past which it is unprofitable to distribute them in print form. At that point the book falls out of print. It doesn’t mean that there is no longer a demand for this particular title but that merely that there is not enough of it to justify the expense of printing it. This cost is referred to as marginal cost. The beautiful thing about eBooks, though, is that the marginal cost of each eBook is essentially zero dollars.

This means that there is no reason to not have any title on the shelves, since it doesn’t cost money to keep them there. This opens up a whole new world of specialty books, one hit wonders, and former best sellers that would otherwise be difficult to find or would require a very expensive limited run from the publisher.

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