Sentences with phrase «normalized page count»

Under the fantastically named KENPC v2.0 (Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count), Amazon claims «the average KENPC will change by less than 5 %, although individual books» changes may be bigger or smaller».
The marvellously titled Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count (KENPC) appears to have been set so a novel can work out at nearly twice the length of the estimated «Print length» included in Kindle book details.
Given that the length of an e-book page varies depending on the device it's being read on, Amazon has developed what it dubs a «standardized approach» to determine how many «pages» of a KDP e-book have been read each month — coming up with yet another acronym for this (aka the Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count or KENPC).
With the start of the changes, each of your Kindle books will show a new number — the Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count (KENPC).
In January of 2016, Amazon announced yet another change in how they were going to pay authors with the introduction of KENPC v2.0 (Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count).
On August 1, 2017 Amazon KDP announced the release of the third iteration of the Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count (KENPC) system.
At the same time they introduced KENPC (Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count), which accounted for type size and line spacing to prevent anyone from cheating the system and artificially making their books longer.
Your book's Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count will vary from it's paperback page count depending on the formatting of your book.
As you know, «page count» in an eBook is arbitrary in a reflowable eBook, and can change based on the reader's preferences (font face, font size, device size, etc.) In July 2015 when Amazon went to a per - page royalty payout, Amazon used an algorithm called KENPC (Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count) to tabulate the page count.
(Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count (KENPC) v1.0: XXX).
5) The KENP is at the bottom of that box — example: «Swindle Town» Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count (KENPC) v1.0: 437
And of course, in ebooks there's Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count (KENPC), which can be considerably different from the number of your novel's pages that you estimated.
On their website, Amazon's revealed the «Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count (KENPC v1.0)»: a calculation based off traditional standards of margin spacing, font size, etc..
The normalized page count is 7.
To determine a book's page count in a way that works across genres and devices, we've developed the Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count (KENPC).
«Playing Five Number Patterns By Date» Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count (KENPC) v1.0: 29 The Start Reading Location for your book has not been set yet.
Also, my KENPC (Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count) went way up (again, relatively speaking).
It stands for Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count and it's the way Amazon now measures page reads by Kindle Unlimited Subscribers.
They did, and it's called Kindle Edition Normalized Page Count (or KENPC, and yay, a new acronym).
Amazon is using a normalized page count that accounts for how much content is actually there, so the rate should be the same no matter the layout.
Taking the normalized page counts and the $ 0.006 / page a number of sites are quoting as what Amazon will be paying, I get the following potential payouts for this month: $ 29.68 for Duty from Ashes, $ 31.60 for Vengeance from Ashes, and $ 310.79 for Sword of Arelion.
Enter your Kindle Edition Normalize Page Count, as it is displayed in your KDP dashboard.
Amazon said that it developed a way to normalize page counts across devices and genres to account for differences in font size, line spacing and more.

Not exact matches

They don't appear to take into account that the «page count» we are being paid for is not the physical number of pages but the «normalized» number.
They did not like the fact those in the program would be paid based on a «normalized» page count.
By the way, Amazon, why not give us the «normalized page» count for our title (in other words, on our dashboard, tell us what this number is so we can use it to figure out how many books are being read through.)
The «normalized» page count is actually 671.
If your books have 300 - 500 pages of data, and that's not counted in the normalized page length, then it's a reference book, right?
The new KENPC or Kindle Edition Normalized Pages Read formula, which standardizes pages for the count at Amazon, was looking generous.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z