Sentences with phrase «since ebooks bought»

Since eBooks bought from your website will be delivered via email, asking for an email address in exchange for your free, or even paid, eBook is natural.

Not exact matches

Anyway, since I obviously bought the ebook years ago, I'm not going to buy it again, but I was wondering if there was any chance you'd consider forwarding me your companion workout anyway.
Since buying your ebook I have been able to clear out and organise my wardrobe.
Anyone interested in buying ebooks should be happy about the lawsuit, since it means you'll be spending less for ebooks.
6) ebooks since I can buy and read anytime and anywhere 7) I love print books and will not adopt these new gadgets 8) I continue to buy print books, though I read more ebooks.
I have been buying books online since the 90s, but only began reading ebooks with any regularity around 2006 - 2007.
Then often the ebook price is just 2 - 3 Euros lower then than the price for the hardcover book, later when you can buy the paperback it is usually cheaper than the ebook, because that was priced after the hardcover and since book prices are fixed, it usually can not be changed easily.
Since big publishers won their lawsuit and jacked eBook prices way up, I don't buy big pub books anymore.
Which just goes to show how my rate of buying ebooks has dropped off dramatically since its heyday.
(cont'd)- I'm giving away hundreds of listings on the Vault, and as a result of doing so, won't see one thin dime of income on the site until October or later - Given all the time and money I've already sunk into developing the site, I don't even expect to earn back my upfront investment until sometime next year - I'm already personally reaching out to publishers on behalf of authors who are listed in the Vault, on my own time and my own long distance bill, despite the fact that I don't stand to earn so much as a finder's fee if any of those contacts result in an offer - I make my The IndieAuthor Guide available for free on my author site and blog - I built Publetariat, a free resource for self - pubbing authors and small imprints, by myself, and paid for its registration, software and hosting out of my own pocket - I shoulder all the ongoing expense and the lion's share of administration for the Publetariat site, which since its launch on 2/11 of this year, has only earned $ 36 in ad revenue; the site never has, and likely never will, earn its keep in ad revenue, but I keep it going because I know it's a valuable resource for authors and publishers - I've given away far more copies of my novels than I've sold, because I'm a pushover for anyone who emails me to say s / he can't afford to buy them - I paid my own travel expenses to speak at this year's O'Reilly Tools of Change conference, nearly $ 1000, just to be part of the Rise of Ebooks panel and raise awareness about self - published authors who are strategically leveraging ebooks - I judge in self - published book competitions, and I read the * entire * book in every case, despite the fact that the honorarium has never been more than $ 12 per book — a figure that works out to less than $.50 per hour of my time spent reading and commenting In spite of all this, you still come here and elsewhere to insinuate I'm greedy and only out to take advantage of my fellow auEbooks panel and raise awareness about self - published authors who are strategically leveraging ebooks - I judge in self - published book competitions, and I read the * entire * book in every case, despite the fact that the honorarium has never been more than $ 12 per book — a figure that works out to less than $.50 per hour of my time spent reading and commenting In spite of all this, you still come here and elsewhere to insinuate I'm greedy and only out to take advantage of my fellow auebooks - I judge in self - published book competitions, and I read the * entire * book in every case, despite the fact that the honorarium has never been more than $ 12 per book — a figure that works out to less than $.50 per hour of my time spent reading and commenting In spite of all this, you still come here and elsewhere to insinuate I'm greedy and only out to take advantage of my fellow authors.
But since we usually post our books eight times (in paperback, an ebook in pdf, and six other «open» publishers within a few days of each other), we use two of our ISBNs that we bought (at embarrassing overpriced rates from Bowker), one for bound versions, one for digital versions.
Since I bought my first ebook reader device, I highlight and take notes a lot.
I live abroad, so buying ebooks is a major issue most of the time, since some vendors won't even allow me to do so without many an issue (Barnes and Noble anyone?).
Since KU is a subscription model, users aren't buying a copy of an ebook.
Since then I have bought yet more Kindle books, but also still read from my own ebooks collection.
While it is unclear as to whether the author gave any form of permission to Open Road to release the ebook, HarperCollins asserts that it would still be a violation of the original contract since the publisher bought the rights to the book at publication.
That said, I would be surprised if they supported epub because 1) they aren't really inclined to make it easier to use other ebook formats, since they sell kindles to get people to buy books from them in kindle format and 2) mobi is only really supported because the kindle format is based off it.
I buy more ebooks and since I read a lot of series books, I just wait about a year until the latest book comes out.
Since I know the ebook cost $ 7.99, I'm starting to wonder why I didn't just buy it, except I've already paid $ 2.
This places Bluefire ahead of both Kobo and Txtr — two other reader apps with similar capabilities — since these apps favour titles bought from their own or their partners» ebook stores.
I fully expected more people to borrow these than to buy them (I honestly wanted buyers to wait until the complete serial was available in one ebook, as that would be a better deal for them and for me, too, since I could get the 70 % split on that).
I am holding off buying an eBook reader since i can read ebooks on my phone.
Since Apple takes a 30 % cut of the sales price, then it seems likely that ebooks bought as in - app purchases will cost 30 % more than if bought direct from Amazon or Barnes & Noble.
So as much as I am a fan of eBooks I am in a bit of a «waiting» mode now and I don't buy much (which is not a big deal since I have a few hundred unread books).
I've been doing this since I started buying ebooks.
With nonfiction, it does seem to be especially important that authors have an existing audience for their eBooks, since they can't take advantage of the thousands and thousands of people who regularly buy any new work of genre fiction that seems interesting (the graze «n gobble crowd).
Additionally, the retailers make it difficult to load EPUB and MOBI eBooks onto your device since they only want you buying these books from within their ecosystem.
One downside I have heard about preorders from authors who have used it before is that Amazon's algorithms don't create a tsunami effect on the first day of a book launch, since fans have been buying the eBook via preorder over a period of many days in advance.
There are people buying ebooks, reading them quickly, then returning them for a full refund, like stay - at - home mom Elisabeth Gilbert who told me, «I have literally never spent money on an ebook since getting an iPad.»
I've long - since been buying Baen ebooks (often as a way to get the book months before it would normally be available).
Frankly, I found this disappointing, but not unexpected since the fear is you wouldn't buy a printed copy (or a DRM - infested ebook copy) if you could read the old volumes online for a subscription price.
Studies have shown that pirating does not have a negative effect on eBooks sales in most cases since the people who do so are not planning to buy your eBook anyway.
Ebooks are the perfect last minute gifts, since you can buy the book (usually at a lower price than a print book too) and send the file over to your mom's tablet, eReader, or handheld device with ease.
It's been fifteen months since I signed the contract for my debut memoir, with a small start up publisher; and since so much changed in the industry this past summer, with more people buying ebooks, I'm telling myself this time frame is understandable.
It's interesting, I have been buying ebooks ever since the first edition of the kindle came out and my purchase of physical books has gradually dwindled down to zero.
Here's the thing, if you're actually trying to decide which ebook ecosystem to buy into, if you haven't already: You should go with the ebook ecosystem that you think will last, since all of your books that aren't free are going to be tied up by DRM, and you don't want to wind up like the suckers who bought music files from Walmart when they shut down their store.
You can also giveaway a whole bunch of copies of your ebooks, which is a work around since you can't buy more than one copy of your ebook on one account.
I know this because ever since I became an ebook reader when the Kindle released, I have steadily lessened the number of print titles I buy or read down to nearly zero.
It's been about 18 months since Amazon's original Kindle Oasis was launched, a premium ebook reader that dropped jaws with its unconventional design — where one side is considerably thicker than the other — and rather outlandish price; in Australia, buying one would set you back $ 449.
Since we're now up to, oh, about a dozen buy links, I think you'd probably have to break them down the purchase options into print, ebook and audio editions and then from there readers can click through to the retailer of their choice.
If you want to buy ebooks, your selection is wide open since most file types are supported.
This not only looks like fresh content to readers of my blog who have also bought my eBook, but it keeps me safe from the Kindle gremlins who want to make my eBook «free» because they found the same content on my blog for free, or block my eBook due to «plagiarism» since the content inside my eBook is also on my website, of which both situations are against Amazon's Terms of Service.
I fell in love with Kindles straight away, but since owning one not only do I download an endless number of ebooks, I buy probably ten times as many paper books as I used to.
I've been buying Books [and DVDs] since 1999; Blu - Rays since 2009, and eBooks since 2010.
Since the big 5 - 6 instituted agency pricing I've bought maybe a handful of ebooks and those mostly via alternative platforms (Baen, SW).
I will admit, that since I purchased an iPad, I've bought more ebooks than physical books (although more from Kindle than iBooks due to the selection.)
Since we (authors, publishers) get income from purchases by readers of pBooks and / or eBooks, trying to force pBook sales is not making it easy for eBook readers to buy the book.
Since I just bought my Kobo, that'll be the ebook reader.
Since I have bought a Kobo H20 but I didn't find so much confort in using a ebook reader as for the NST.
Sometimes I buy eBooks from BN and sometimes from the Apple store since eBooks titles are not available universally for some reason.
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