Posts Tagged ‘kindle’

Amazon offers fair Royalty scheme for eBook Authors

Published by calhoun on October 6th, 2010 - in Internet, News, Technology

Amazon ebook readerAmazon has announced that 70% of the sale of a eBook product will go to the author. In comparison with the music industry this is a huge change. Instead of rights holders getting the money the person responsible for the product’s creation will get the money instead.

The technology does also mean that new authors can actually see the benefit of their work without having to hire professional publishers – Amazon is already established as a place to purchase books from and authors are able to submit their works there will likely be a check to verify that they are authorized (ie really are the author) prior to it going live. Once it has however they will be able to keep the huge chunk of the profit.

There is a number of requirements of the scheme which seems very fair: The cost must be in the range of £1.49 to £6.99. It must be at least 20% cheaper than the physical book – this will be especially easy for new content. Surprisingly they are charging delivery on ebooks, at a cost of £0.10 per Mb. Luckily, text does not tend to take a huge chunk of space so many delivery costs will be less  than that is.

This scheme seems fair to the author, the question becomes when will the music industry catch up where musicians get barely a fraction of the money generated from their work ?

References
TechRadar

Dictionary may not be printed

Published by calhoun on August 30th, 2010 - in News, Technology

Oxford University Press, the publisher behind the Oxford English Dictionary has stated that no decisions have been made about the format of the 3rd Edition of the Dictionary, which has been worked on since 1989.Oxford English Dictionary

However comments by the CEO unveil that there is doubts that the latest revision of the dictionary will never be printed. Reference books for many look impressive in shelves. So how can that effect be achieved when every book known becomes a mere 2MB file in the Downloads folder of a user account?

Despite facing a rising challange as a bookpublisher from the likes of the iPad and Amazon’s Kindle the standard version of the dictionary that comes in a single volume edition is likely to stay on the book shop shelves for another 30 years. Oxford has already taken advantage of the Internet stream where the dictionary is available online for a fixed annual fee.

References
The Gaurdian
The Telegraph

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