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Derik Dupont

Barry Diller: Paywalls Will Work Eventually - 0 views

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    Barry Diller told Bloomberg TV's Betty Liu that he believes people will pay for media content in the future, and that paywalls will work eventually. "[Free content] will end because now so many people are used to paying for applications, whether they pay 99 cents or whether they pay for a tune, or they pay 99 cents to play Solitaire, or $4.95 to do this or $2.95 to do that, or one kind of one stop, very simple to do," Diller said.
Derik Dupont

Apple?s Prices for E-Books May Be Lower Than Expected - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Apple wanted publishers to discount best sellers, so its $12.99-to-$14.99 range is merely a ceiling, according to people familiar with talks with publishers.
Derik Dupont

Media Talk - E-Books by FT Press Slim Down to Quick Reads - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    FT Press is selling stripped-down, 1,000- to 2,000-word versions of books, for $1.99, and a new series of essays of about 5,000 words, for $2.99.
Derik Dupont

Students can research books on their iPods.... But will they? | Technology | Los Angele... - 0 views

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    Questia Library Plus iPhone app. Credit: Questia We'll spare you the obvious "there's an app for that" joke. But you can get a library's worth of books on your phone. Questia, an online research portal for students, announced its application today for reading books, articles and periodicals on an iPhone or iPod Touch. The app costs 99 cents for 5,000 public-domain books and a week of unlimited access. After that, users can buy a two-week subscription for $9.99. There are so many things wrong with this we don't know where to start. For one, students don't like to buy things....
arnie Grossblatt

Why J.K. Rowling's new ebook is $17.99 - 4 views

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    Uproar over $18 price for the new Rowling book.  E-books just don't get no respect.
arnie Grossblatt

thedigitalist.net » Skills in the Digital Era part two - 0 views

  • in my view there is no need for a digital editor as such in a trade publishing house, rather an editor who understands the digital world:
  • it’s marketing that will have to continue to change the most to find new readers and new ways of reaching readers.
  • Writing that uses new media by incorporating visuals, sound, movies and so on in different delivery platforms such as the new Sony Reader, Alternate Reality Games mixing narrative and interaction by readers and contributors, self-published material, collaborative wikinovels and other kinds of informal, or extra-formal creativity, are exactly the kind of material that a traditional trade publishing house such as Pan Macmillan, however innovative, finds it very difficult to use, or even acknowledge, in a publishing process, and it’s unlikely to be seriously practical in the short term, which means until someone can think of a way to make money out of it, not least because digital projects are typically seen by customers and authors as free or very low-cost, when in fact they’re often more expensive than traditional ones because of the high set-up and development costs
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • two key issues: accuracy of conversion, which we set at 99.999999%, instead of some competitors’ 99.95%, and attending to the reader experience by providing accurate and appropriate metadata, which is one of the points I want to illustrate later on to show why I believe editors need new knowledge not new skills
  • What it needs to do instead is create a new post-publishing process, a sort of après-lit, which makes clever and effective use of reader involvement through websites and with social-networking tools, but that is familiar Web 2.0 material and outside the scope of this answer.
  • How much is digital going to change the way I work?’
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    One editor's take what endures and what changes for publishers and editors in the digital world.
arnie Grossblatt

Getting Google to notice your ebook - 0 views

  • but Google eBookstore suddenly gives booksellers a reason to at least wade into SEO.
  • But what about new books and ebooks? How does Google determine which new titles, and the more than 15 million books that have been scanned, float to the top of its search results pages: in the web search box and in the ebookstore. The challenge, for Gray and other Google engineers on the Books project, is that the best known component of Google's algorithm for determining the the value of a web resource -- the number of links to it by others -- does not apply to books and ebooks. Although it is possible to link to a selection in certain books on Google Books (here's a hyperlink into the aforementioned Galbraith title) people don't generally create links to the contents of a book or ebook. So linking is not a reliable indicator of quality.
  • One strategy that Google employs is to tap into the book industry's "rich tradition of metadata.
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  • Google also looks at what Gray referred to as "market signals:" how often a book has been reprinted, web searches, recent book sales, the number of libraries that hold the book, etc.
  • 2. Create quality content outside the book
  • 1. Use descriptive titles and chapter headings
  • 3 best practices for getting Google to notice your book
  • 3. Book covers matter
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    With the opening of the Google Bookstore, it's time for publishers to start thinking about search engine optimization (SEO)
Allison Begezda

iMinds in Distribution Agreement with OverDrive - 11/18/2009 2:38:00 PM - Publishers We... - 0 views

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    iMinds offers 8 minute long audiobook "tracks" available for $0.99 and currently has 30 titles in the top 100 audiobook charts on iTunes.
Kristen Iovino

Amazon.com: JohnShore.com: Kindle Store: John Shore - 1 views

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    I've never seen this feature before- you can pay for monthly access to a blog for your Kindle. This author's blog is $1.99 per month.
arnie Grossblatt

99 Cent E-Books - 3 views

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    Will publishing follow the trajectory of the recorded music industry?  Kevin Kelly  thinks so.
arnie Grossblatt

Post-Medium Publishing - 0 views

  • iTunes is more of a tollbooth
    • arnie Grossblatt
       
      This is saving the argument by changing the terms mid-stream.
  • much the same with digital books
    • arnie Grossblatt
       
      How the same? Claiming it doesn't make it so. And books cost more than 99 cents; ten dollars is not, in Graham's terms, an ignorable event.
  • But though I can't predict specific winners, I can offer a recipe for recognizing them. When you see something that's taking advantage of new technology to give people something they want that they couldn't have before, you're probably looking at a winner. And when you see something that's merely reacting to new technology in an attempt to preserve some existing source of revenue, you're probably looking at a loser.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • In fact consumers never really were paying for content, and publishers weren't really selling it either. If the content was what they were selling, why has the price of books or music or movies always depended mostly on the format? Why didn't better content cost more?
  • If audiences were willing to pay more for better content, why wasn't anyone already selling it to them?
Allison Begezda

First Google eBooks Device To Go on Sale at Target This Week - 1 views

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    Google will make inroads into the ereader market next week when the first such device using the Google eBooks platform will go on sale at Target. The iriver Story HD will retail for $139.99 - the same price as the Kindle and the Nook Simple Touch Reader - at the chain July 17, according to a blog post from Google.
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