mobi, thus are the only
ebook distributor who use it.
«A Tale Of Two Cities» and «Great Expectations» both by Charles Dickens and available for years from PG and all the other
eBook distributors who use our materials.
Not exact matches
Once launched, Amazon will be up against Litres,
who is the leading
distributor of
ebooks in the country.
People
who have amassed libraries of paper books over many years were left behind by
ebook distributors.
The way it handles data can take two distinctive forms: personal information about the user
who purchased the
eBook (such as an email address) or an ID number that the
distributor can use to look up the user or transaction in a database.
The authors, publishers, and
distributors who are fighting this diligently are trying to prevent the current positive tide of
ebook enjoyment from turning when consumer readers are finally fed up with wading through the spam.
The way it handles data can take two distinctive forms: personal information about the user
who purchased the
eBook (such as an email address) or an ID number that the
distributor can use to look up the user or transaction in a database and is otherwise meaningless.
In practical terms, the report's «Global
Ebook Yellow Pages» may be of use to many
who want to access and do business with some of the 350 listed companies «dedicated to
ebooks» and including publishers, service organizations,
distributors, and aggregators.
Many indie authors recommend making a perfect, separate file for each
ebook distributor according to their regulations, and criticize book designers
who don't.
The first thing to understand about
ebook spam, pirated content, and PLR content (PLR books are titles that were written by one author with the intention of selling that title to other would - be authors
who wish to put their names on it and sell it as their own original work, resulting in multiple copies of the same worthless book flooding the catalog) is that the various retailers and
distributors who make
ebooks available to the general public are all doing their utmost to protect the integrity of their catalogs.
Authors would be advised to distribute their
ebooks to as many
distributors as possible because there is a large number of people
who will not purchase from Amazon or Apple and
who hate DRM.
When the Kansas Digital Library Consortium's contract with digital - content
distributor OverDrive was up for renewal last year, two issues made Kansas State Librarian Joanne Budler decide it was time to move on and transfer the
ebook titles to another vendor
who could offer a better deal.
An author
who establishes an English - language version of his
ebook and makes it available to the major
distributors is still only reaching readers
who can feasibly purchase and read the title in English, regardless of how far reaching the retailer is.
The third - ranked
ebook distributor and developer of the Kobo touch screen e-ink reader that was unveiled at BookExpo America this year has an opportunity to reach a captive audience, that is, a demographic
who can't yet utilize an Amazon Kindle store.
Aggregators are
distributors who send your
ebooks to many different places; they are popular because you upload one place and the aggregator then sends the book everywhere else for you.
Amazon is the only
distributor who charges
ebook download fees, so this will be fine for others.
One upload to it, and it takes care of sending your files to almost every
ebook distributor but Amazon, including those
who supply libraries.
As many of you
who follow my blog may know, I use a
distributor for my
eBooks for many sales channels outside of Amazon.
And there are a couple of
ebook distributors, like BookBaby,
who offer paid services.
It is definitely required reading for any author
who wants to distribute their work on a marvelous place like Smashwords - the ultimate
distributor for major
ebook retailers.
Amazon has rapidly built a leading position as a producer and
distributor of indie works during the past few years, developing its
ebook publishing service Kindle Direct Publishing, and CreateSpace, an online service for people
who want to make their work available through on - demand print books, music CDs, and DVDs.