Quantcast

John Sargent awarded the Nimble Books Baton of Glory

Macmillan CEO has been awarded the Nimble Books Baton of Glory in honor of his superb service to the publishing industry in the recent Amazon-Macmillan tiff.

#Google Editions has it in for science and academic publishers

Who has exorbitant prices, other than scientific, academic, and professional publishers?

Mr. Turvey said that Google would probably allow publishers to charge consumers the same price for digital editions as they do for new hardcover versions. He said Google would reserve the right to adjust prices that it deemed “exorbitant.”

via Poised to Sell E-Books, Google Takes On Amazon – NYTimes.com.

Sell #Google Editions from your own website

Publishers Marketplace scoops world!

One major aspect of Edition not yet reported is that it will allow online retailers to sell the digital books directly from their site, with Google playing the role of electronic distributor. The selling feature is linked to Preview, the program that already lets retailers present the ability to browse inside Partner books.

via Publishers Lunch Deluxe: Closer Reading of Google Edition.

#amazonfail #kindledx When will publishers be able to upload PDFs to Amazon DTP?

Pretty straightforward question, which I have posed on the Amazon DTP forum and a couple of Twitter threads  


Since Amazon hasn’t announced anything  on this $64 million issue, I’m assuming the answer is either “no, never” or “yes, but not until after the textbook publishers finish their beta program this summer.”  Why not just be transparent about it?

will my Nimble book be published as an e-book? #ebook

Yes and no.

Yes: I  upload all books published by Nimble Books to Google Book Search,  Amazon Search Inside the Book, and Amazon Upgrade.  There is a lag of 1-4 months after nominal publication date before the book actually appears in those places.  As you may know, once the Google author settlement is closed, Google will begin offering PDF downloads of “their” books.

No: my stance on e-books is that I am waiting until I can deploy my entire list (which includes many color books with high production values) to a device that can read and display near-full-size (~ 8 x 10) color PDFs.  Tech-savvy readers will be aware that the Kindle DX claims to have a native PDF reader and a low-res (150 pixel per inch) grayscale display … but at this writing, Amazon has not yet answered the $64 million question: whether there will be a way for publishers to deploy their PDFs to Kindle via the Amazon DTP system or their Mobipocket subsidiary.

Demise of Shaman Drum & Future of Bookselling and Publishing

The immiment demise of Ann Arbor’s quirky, well-regarded Shaman Drum bookstore has sparked a very interesting thread over at the Ann Arbor Chronicle, which inspired me to write this about the future of e-books and publishing.  The whole thread is worth reading.

 

(in response to post 28) Scott — I am well aware of Tablet PCs — I attended Microsoft’s alpha stage Tablet SDK meeting and had a first-generation Motion Tablet– but IMHO there is still a long way to go for Tablets to approach the readability and portability of paper. That is to say nothing of paper’s instant-on feature, complete absence of [electronic] bugs, and [sometimes literally] bulletproof security compared to Windows Vista Tablet PC Edition …

What I don’t like about the current generation of e-readers is that the e-book manufacturers are forcing major design and readability compromises on publishers–a classic example of technology-driven product development. What publishers want and need is to be able to display e-books using the universal publishing standard for high-quality design display: PDF. You simply can’t present a design-driven title likeTHE DEFINITIVE ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF TORPEDO BOATS (for Anonymouse’s sake!) in device-independent dumbed-down HTML.

As you may know, the current generation of book readers uses the E-Ink technology, which currently does B&W 800 x 640 on a flexible substrate. They project that color E-Ink devices will become available no earlier than 2011. Hi-res is important: readability studies shows that paper with 600 dpi is the gold standard. a 600 dpi 8 x 10 page is 4800 x 6000 pixels, which is still a pretty big image even for today’s computers.

I suspect that E-Ink devices capable of displaying hi-res PDF will be ~ 2015.

What does this mean for publishers and booksellers? For publishers, it means a (losing) struggle with e-book manufacturers over their share of the revenue pie. For booksellers, it means less revenue from simply delivering physically encoded books to people, and figuring out a way to move up the value chain–which I think is what Karl Pohrt is planning to do. I like the idea of a bookstore as a salon, but if I look around at other industries it seems that continuous physical presence is a more difficult business model to operate than old reliables like personal appearances, training classes, and consulting services.

Median online Google Book will be $5.99

For readers who might want to buy digital access to an individual scanned book, Mr. Clancy said, Google was likely to sell at least half of the books for $5.99 or less.

via Google Hopes to Open a Trove of Little-Seen Books – NYTimes.com

This is a key factoid because under the master settlement agreement, Google has the right to automatically set prices unless publisher overrules.

Author’s guild on e-book royalties

Feh.

Are they talking about 15% of the catalog retail price for the e-book, or for the printed version?

Either way, 15% is fair…

Doesn’t matter much to me, because I see no evidence that e-books are going to take off anytime soon.

Authors Guild Warns on S&S e-Book Royalty Proposal – 7/18/2008 7:17:00 AM – Publishers Weekly

The Authors Guild has sent out an advisory to its members suggesting that they carefully review a letter from Simon & Schuster that looks to add an amendment to their contracts that will set the standard royalty for e-books at 15% of the catalog retail price for e-books. The Authors Guild alert makes three points about the proposal: members should discuss the amendment with their attorney or agent; warns that, depending on a member’s particular contract with S&S, the amendment may grant S&S rights that otherwise would be retained by the author; and notes that members should be aware that the amendment may affect their ability to obtain a reversion of rights.

The alert further advises that members should “keep your powder dry,” when negotiating e-book royalty rates, suggesting that members try to retain the right to renegotiate e-book royalties. “The Authors Guild expects that the 15% of the retail list price will be the low-water mark for e-book royalties,” the Guild speculated. “As the e-book market develops, authors with clout will doubtlessly insist on a more reasonable share of e-book revenues, and the industry will have to adapt.”