Re: [scifinoir2] ebook prices going up soon

2010-04-03 Thread Martin Baxter
Boy, am I glad that I like the feel of a book in my hands.

On Sat, Apr 3, 2010 at 12:07 AM, brent wodehouse 
brent_wodeho...@thefence.us wrote:



 http://jam.canoe.ca/Books/2010/03/30/13414016-cp.html

 ebook prices going up soon

 By Michael Oliveira, THE CANADIAN PRESS

 TORONTO - If you were thinking about buying an ebook, you may want to do
 it now.

 The prices of most new releases will soon be hiked by as much as 30 to 50
 per cent.

 A major upheaval in the ebook world is coming Thursday, with five of the
 six biggest publishers in North America implementing a new pricing regime
 that will do away with discounting and the need for comparison shopping.

 Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins, MacMillan, Penguin Group and Simon 
 Schuster are moving to the so-called agency model, which means they will
 dictate the price their ebooks are sold at and retailers will be forced to
 follow.

 It's expected to result in price increases for new releases, which
 consumers will definitely notice, said Mike Serbinis, chief executive of
 Kobo, the online ebook retailer owned 58 per cent by Indigo Books  Music
 Inc. (TSX:IDG).

 The days of new releases usually priced at US$9.99 are numbered and
 readers can think of $12.99 or $14.99 as the new normal.

 I think what you're going to see is a lack of discounts, so consumers
 will notice that. So far, they've seen list prices of $29.99 and 60 per
 cent discounts, with the actual selling prices around 10 bucks - that will
 go away in general, he said.

 However, there's still one major publisher that hasn't switched over to
 the new pricing model, Random House, and Serbinis expects its books will
 be discounted aggressively by retailers.

 The launch of Thursday's new pricing regime was a last-minute change
 imposed by the publishers and retailers are scrambling to adapt by the
 deadline.

 As a result, some titles may disappear temporarily, if all the logistics
 aren't sorted out in time.

 We're working feverishly, like all the other major players in this space,
 to get ready for Thursday, the change - I would say like all things in
 this space right now - has happened very fast, said Serbinis.

 There's legal stuff to do, there's IT things to do to get the new pricing
 and the new approach and the new rules in place in time.

 Macmillan CEO John Sargent said in a blog post that its new releases
 generally will be priced between $12.99 and $14.99, although there might
 be some exceptions. When books go into paperback, the ebook price
 typically will be reduced to a range of $6.99 to $9.99, he added.

  



Re: [scifinoir2] ebook prices going up soon

2010-04-03 Thread Keith Johnson
WTF? What justifies this price hike for a medium that by its very nature--no 
paper or other material costs for printing--should be cheaper? You start hiking 
the price of a digital book up to thirteen or fourteen books, and it's better 
to just wait for the hardback or paperback at discount, and have a copy that's 
free from controls and all the DRM crap. 
Will Apple be able to buck them, the way they bucked the networks by offering 
video fare at less than what the studios wanted? 


- Original Message - 
From: brent wodehouse brent_wodeho...@thefence.us 
To: SciFiNoir Lit scifinoir_...@yahoogroups.com, scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Saturday, April 3, 2010 12:07:35 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [scifinoir2] ebook prices going up soon 






http://jam.canoe.ca/Books/2010/03/30/13414016-cp.html 

ebook prices going up soon 

By Michael Oliveira, THE CANADIAN PRESS 

TORONTO - If you were thinking about buying an ebook, you may want to do 
it now. 

The prices of most new releases will soon be hiked by as much as 30 to 50 
per cent. 

A major upheaval in the ebook world is coming Thursday, with five of the 
six biggest publishers in North America implementing a new pricing regime 
that will do away with discounting and the need for comparison shopping. 

Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins, MacMillan, Penguin Group and Simon  
Schuster are moving to the so-called agency model, which means they will 
dictate the price their ebooks are sold at and retailers will be forced to 
follow. 

It's expected to result in price increases for new releases, which 
consumers will definitely notice, said Mike Serbinis, chief executive of 
Kobo, the online ebook retailer owned 58 per cent by Indigo Books  Music 
Inc. (TSX:IDG). 

The days of new releases usually priced at US$9.99 are numbered and 
readers can think of $12.99 or $14.99 as the new normal. 

I think what you're going to see is a lack of discounts, so consumers 
will notice that. So far, they've seen list prices of $29.99 and 60 per 
cent discounts, with the actual selling prices around 10 bucks - that will 
go away in general, he said. 

However, there's still one major publisher that hasn't switched over to 
the new pricing model, Random House, and Serbinis expects its books will 
be discounted aggressively by retailers. 

The launch of Thursday's new pricing regime was a last-minute change 
imposed by the publishers and retailers are scrambling to adapt by the 
deadline. 

As a result, some titles may disappear temporarily, if all the logistics 
aren't sorted out in time. 

We're working feverishly, like all the other major players in this space, 
to get ready for Thursday, the change - I would say like all things in 
this space right now - has happened very fast, said Serbinis. 

There's legal stuff to do, there's IT things to do to get the new pricing 
and the new approach and the new rules in place in time. 

Macmillan CEO John Sargent said in a blog post that its new releases 
generally will be priced between $12.99 and $14.99, although there might 
be some exceptions. When books go into paperback, the ebook price 
typically will be reduced to a range of $6.99 to $9.99, he added. 




Re: [scifinoir2] ebook prices going up soon

2010-04-03 Thread Keith Johnson
Amen, brother! 
For many many reasons I'd never trust any source of information I have to 
purely digital form: drives fail, files get corrupted, flash drives get lost or 
stolen. Someone could always hack into your system to delete a book, as was 
done recently by Amazon. Worst of all, encoded protections can prevent copies 
being made. 
But good old parchment isn't fancy, can't be hacked, can be copied ad infinitum 
,and doesn't require batteries. 

- Original Message - 
From: Martin Baxter martinbaxt...@gmail.com 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Saturday, April 3, 2010 6:45:33 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] ebook prices going up soon 






Boy, am I glad that I like the feel of a book in my hands. 


On Sat, Apr 3, 2010 at 12:07 AM, brent wodehouse  brent_wodeho...@thefence.us 
 wrote: 








http://jam.canoe.ca/Books/2010/03/30/13414016-cp.html 

ebook prices going up soon 

By Michael Oliveira, THE CANADIAN PRESS 

TORONTO - If you were thinking about buying an ebook, you may want to do 
it now. 

The prices of most new releases will soon be hiked by as much as 30 to 50 
per cent. 

A major upheaval in the ebook world is coming Thursday, with five of the 
six biggest publishers in North America implementing a new pricing regime 
that will do away with discounting and the need for comparison shopping. 

Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins, MacMillan, Penguin Group and Simon  
Schuster are moving to the so-called agency model, which means they will 
dictate the price their ebooks are sold at and retailers will be forced to 
follow. 

It's expected to result in price increases for new releases, which 
consumers will definitely notice, said Mike Serbinis, chief executive of 
Kobo, the online ebook retailer owned 58 per cent by Indigo Books  Music 
Inc. (TSX:IDG). 

The days of new releases usually priced at US$9.99 are numbered and 
readers can think of $12.99 or $14.99 as the new normal. 

I think what you're going to see is a lack of discounts, so consumers 
will notice that. So far, they've seen list prices of $29.99 and 60 per 
cent discounts, with the actual selling prices around 10 bucks - that will 
go away in general, he said. 

However, there's still one major publisher that hasn't switched over to 
the new pricing model, Random House, and Serbinis expects its books will 
be discounted aggressively by retailers. 

The launch of Thursday's new pricing regime was a last-minute change 
imposed by the publishers and retailers are scrambling to adapt by the 
deadline. 

As a result, some titles may disappear temporarily, if all the logistics 
aren't sorted out in time. 

We're working feverishly, like all the other major players in this space, 
to get ready for Thursday, the change - I would say like all things in 
this space right now - has happened very fast, said Serbinis. 

There's legal stuff to do, there's IT things to do to get the new pricing 
and the new approach and the new rules in place in time. 

Macmillan CEO John Sargent said in a blog post that its new releases 
generally will be priced between $12.99 and $14.99, although there might 
be some exceptions. When books go into paperback, the ebook price 
typically will be reduced to a range of $6.99 to $9.99, he added. 








Re: [scifinoir2] ebook prices going up soon

2010-04-03 Thread Martin Baxter
Couldn't have said it better, Keith. And I hope, for the sake of those who
e-book, that Apple is able to fight the system and win, else the competition
may price itself right out of e-book purchasing.

On Sat, Apr 3, 2010 at 4:42 PM, Keith Johnson keithbjohn...@comcast.netwrote:



 WTF? What justifies this price hike for a medium that by its very
 nature--no paper or other material costs for printing--should be cheaper?
 You start hiking the price of a digital book up to thirteen or fourteen
 books, and it's better to just wait for the hardback or paperback at
 discount, and have a copy that's free from controls and all the DRM crap.
 Will Apple be able to buck them, the way they bucked the networks by
 offering video fare at less than what the studios wanted?



 - Original Message -
 From: brent wodehouse brent_wodeho...@thefence.us
 To: SciFiNoir Lit scifinoir_...@yahoogroups.com,
 scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, April 3, 2010 12:07:35 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
 Subject: [scifinoir2] ebook prices going up soon



 http://jam.canoe.ca/Books/2010/03/30/13414016-cp.html

 ebook prices going up soon

 By Michael Oliveira, THE CANADIAN PRESS

 TORONTO - If you were thinking about buying an ebook, you may want to do
 it now.

 The prices of most new releases will soon be hiked by as much as 30 to 50
 per cent.

 A major upheaval in the ebook world is coming Thursday, with five of the
 six biggest publishers in North America implementing a new pricing regime
 that will do away with discounting and the need for comparison shopping.

 Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins, MacMillan, Penguin Group and Simon 
 Schuster are moving to the so-called agency model, which means they will
 dictate the price their ebooks are sold at and retailers will be forced to
 follow.

 It's expected to result in price increases for new releases, which
 consumers will definitely notice, said Mike Serbinis, chief executive of
 Kobo, the online ebook retailer owned 58 per cent by Indigo Books  Music
 Inc. (TSX:IDG).

 The days of new releases usually priced at US$9.99 are numbered and
 readers can think of $12.99 or $14.99 as the new normal.

 I think what you're going to see is a lack of discounts, so consumers
 will notice that. So far, they've seen list prices of $29.99 and 60 per
 cent discounts, with the actual selling prices around 10 bucks - that will
 go away in general, he said.

 However, there's still one major publisher that hasn't switched over to
 the new pricing model, Random House, and Serbinis expects its books will
 be discounted aggressively by retailers.

 The launch of Thursday's new pricing regime was a last-minute change
 imposed by the publishers and retailers are scrambling to adapt by the
 deadline.

 As a result, some titles may disappear temporarily, if all the logistics
 aren't sorted out in time.

 We're working feverishly, like all the other major players in this space,
 to get ready for Thursday, the change - I would say like all things in
 this space right now - has happened very fast, said Serbinis.

 There's legal stuff to do, there's IT things to do to get the new pricing
 and the new approach and the new rules in place in time.

 Macmillan CEO John Sargent said in a blog post that its new releases
 generally will be priced between $12.99 and $14.99, although there might
 be some exceptions. When books go into paperback, the ebook price
 typically will be reduced to a range of $6.99 to $9.99, he added.





[scifinoir2] ebook prices going up soon

2010-04-02 Thread brent wodehouse
http://jam.canoe.ca/Books/2010/03/30/13414016-cp.html

ebook prices going up soon

By Michael Oliveira, THE CANADIAN PRESS


TORONTO - If you were thinking about buying an ebook, you may want to do
it now.

The prices of most new releases will soon be hiked by as much as 30 to 50
per cent.

A major upheaval in the ebook world is coming Thursday, with five of the
six biggest publishers in North America implementing a new pricing regime
that will do away with discounting and the need for comparison shopping.

Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins, MacMillan, Penguin Group and Simon 
Schuster are moving to the so-called agency model, which means they will
dictate the price their ebooks are sold at and retailers will be forced to
follow.

It's expected to result in price increases for new releases, which
consumers will definitely notice, said Mike Serbinis, chief executive of
Kobo, the online ebook retailer owned 58 per cent by Indigo Books  Music
Inc. (TSX:IDG).

The days of new releases usually priced at US$9.99 are numbered and
readers can think of $12.99 or $14.99 as the new normal.

I think what you're going to see is a lack of discounts, so consumers
will notice that. So far, they've seen list prices of $29.99 and 60 per
cent discounts, with the actual selling prices around 10 bucks - that will
go away in general, he said.

However, there's still one major publisher that hasn't switched over to
the new pricing model, Random House, and Serbinis expects its books will
be discounted aggressively by retailers.

The launch of Thursday's new pricing regime was a last-minute change
imposed by the publishers and retailers are scrambling to adapt by the
deadline.

As a result, some titles may disappear temporarily, if all the logistics
aren't sorted out in time.

We're working feverishly, like all the other major players in this space,
to get ready for Thursday, the change - I would say like all things in
this space right now - has happened very fast, said Serbinis.

There's legal stuff to do, there's IT things to do to get the new pricing
and the new approach and the new rules in place in time.

Macmillan CEO John Sargent said in a blog post that its new releases
generally will be priced between $12.99 and $14.99, although there might
be some exceptions. When books go into paperback, the ebook price
typically will be reduced to a range of $6.99 to $9.99, he added.