Atomica is delighted to announce the release of two brand new exclusive limited
edition prints just in time for present season!
Christopher Derek Bruno released 3 new limited
edition prints just in time for Christmas.
Not exact matches
Current owner Informa recently announced it would cease publication of the
print edition of Lloyd's List effective Dec. 20, after a readership survey found
just 2 % consulted it exclusively.
A version of this article appears in
print on 04/29/2013, on page B1 of the NewYork
edition with the headline: No Words, No Gestures,
Just Your Brain as the Control Pad.
Harper's new
edition of Harper's Bible Dictionary went into its second
printing within
just a few months.
I am once again making my Sophia
prints available for
just $ 25 each (not limited
edition).
Just released today, bumGenius has a brand new limited
edition print.
Just a few weeks ago I handed the Campaigns and Elections folks the latest TechBytes column, and we rushed it online ahead of the
print edition this week to take advantage of its discussion of both social media and data in terms of a Republican revival.
A version of this article appears in
print on June 26, 2011, on Page AR7 of the New York
edition with the headline: Welcome To Chicago,
Just Don't Kill Us.
You can now track your Kindle book sales on Amazon.de by going to the book tracking page on NovelRank and adding your URL,
just like you did for the
print editions.
Just because the digital title might not be available in your own country, you can still likely order the
print edition online.
Thalia has
just unveiled a bold new initiative that hopes that book shoppers will forgo buying the
print edition and buy digital instead.
Just yesterday, BookPage contributor Stephenie Harrison interviewed Nicole Krauss for our October
print edition.
Remembering the literary heydays of yore, I published a limited, numbered
edition of my Requiem for a Country, but even then didn't get a satisfactory choice of type design,
just a prohibitively expensive 50 copies of acceptable, not great
printing artistic merit.
Like the publishing process itself, our service covers much more than
just book layout or ebook conversion (though we do that too — you'll get Kindle and EPUB ebook
editions and, if you want, a
printed edition made available worldwide.)
Given how lowpriced VIZ's subscriptions are, around the same as 3 - 4 issues of the
print magazine, this looks to be an excellent value for potential subscribers, and a different take from other initiatives not
just by charging a subscription fee, but also by teaming it up directly with the
print edition.
But Visual
Editions have not
just focused on
print media.
I imagine those trim sizes might prevent some authors from using Vellum for formatting their
print editions, but Vellum 2.0 was
just released, and it's possible that more trim sizes may be added in the future.
Moreover there are some books that are
just available in electronic format and not in
print or many a times the release of
printed versions are delayed in order to maximize the sales of paperback
editions.
I guess you're not aware of these recent stories — both reported
just last week — about one author getting a two - book deal with Harper Collins based on his Kindle book, and nother getting a deal with Simon & Schuster to publish a
print edition of his Podiobook.
Just make sure you purchase the
print edition of the 2013 Guide to Book Agents.
If you check out ANN's thread about the Ipad App, Ed Chavez from Vertical steps in and explains the difficulties involved with getting digital releases on multiple devices - every device has it's own coding / programming / delivery system [so you can't
just plunk in your high - res PDF for your
print edition], which can sometimes be time consuming or restrictive depending on their policites [the Playstation Network one was rather icky by the sounds of it - they only want chapters, not full books, and they want the comics cut up into a panel by panel slideshow].
Digital is still cheaper than
print: This
just seems like common sense, but digital comics storefronts usually charge the full
print price for new digital comics, and
print books are often cheaper than Kindle
editions on Amazon.
Just let me have the electronic
edition which works infinitely better for me than
print.
Their new replica version basically
just mirrors the
print edition, complete with local adverts, television listings, and other localized content.
If you're
just starting a club, BookPage has many resources: We have a book club column in the
print edition of BookPage (click here for December's highlighted books); and we've got an entire page dedicated to all things book club on BookPage.com, where you can learn about new books out in paperback, write a profile about your club or review books your group enjoyed.
Most magazines are
just static images that replicate the
print edition, but a few such as Popular Mechanics and Entrepreneur are fully interactive with video and other multimedia goodies.
«The title could have been How to be an All - Around Optimized and Awesome Human Being... I think anyone and everyone living in our modern world would be well - served by reading this book... I got the Audible
edition, bought the Kindle
edition to read along with, and
just ordered the
print copy so I can make lots of notes and refer to it often.
Hi Gene — you say «the prices were higher than the price of the
print edition, which is
just fundamentally insane.»
Hi Judith,
Just so I think I understand you correctly, the only way to get a LCCN after publication is to republish /
print a second
edition?
Anyway, news has come that Locke, indie - author extraordinaire, has
just cut a deal with Simon & Schuster concerning distribution of the
print editions of his Donovan Creed series.
Add to that, look at how many releases the author has; if there's only one or two they're either
just starting out or they're a flash in the pan that gave up because it started to get to hard (especially if their last release was over a year ago) and do they have
print as well as ebook
editions?
However, it's still possible for a hybrid publisher to have a sales team and sell to accounts even with
just a
print - on - demand
edition available.
You don't need the device either — I
just bought the Kindle
edition of an out - of -
print book and read it on my laptop.
It's very easy because you
just take your PDF or JPEG [of a
print edition] and convert it.»
As Kotecha pointed out, consumers were happy to pay less for a digital title that is
just straight conversion, possibly because they see that the publisher did not have any costs associated with
printing, shipping, or storing the physical
editions.
Neil Thurman, professor of communication at Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich wrote a very extensive report on 11 daily national newspapers in the U.K. and found that «of the time spent with newspaper brands by their British audiences, 88.5 percent is still in
print with
just 11.5 percent online» — and that in -
print figure is actually driven down a bit by the fact it includes The Guardian and The Daily Mail, «whose audiences spend 77.6 per cent and 74.7 per cent respectively with their
print editions.»
Harper Voyager picked up the book — and a planned sequel — and a
printed edition has
just been released.
There's something to be said for not
just the savings, but also the ability to buy used (and therefore, annotated)
print editions.
Well, as an addicted reader I prefer to have always to versions of book I currently read, I
just simply can't make a choice when it comes to buying the
print edition OR getting the e-book.
Most digital publishing solutions build their digital
editions in such a way that the cover appears first
just as it does with
print.
However,
just as the entire industry and consumer base had to do when the e-reader devices appeared on the market in a wide - scale way, Hsu had to look for — and found — a purpose for digital children's books; in Hsu's case, it was the ability to still read a bedtime story to his children via Skype when he traveled, his children holding their
print edition and he reading on his iPad.
Now it's available as a Kindle ebook for
just $ 16.99 (though the
print edition usually retails for $ 35.00)-- and it's received the ultimate review from my friend Wendy.
The
print edition of Ebert's book normally costs you $ 29.99 — so it's a minor miracle that through Monday night, Amazon's pricing it for
just $ 2.99.
The Rolling Stone Magazine has been on the iPad for a while through third party applications like Zinio, which basically
just mirrored the
print edition.
I plan on
just self - publishing it right now, and I might consider a self - publishing
print edition for fans who love physical books, but I think I'll keep that new one strictly indie.»
Those titles are not
just available to students at the post-secondary level, as many schools are now experimenting with replacing their
print editions with Inkling's digital titles for iPad, among other platforms.
With that in mind, we're proud to announce the launch of our newest PCWorld Digital Magazine Enhanced
Editions, the Enhanced Android Edition and the Enhanced Kindle Edition — and,
just as with the Enhanced iPad Edition, we're pleased to offer them free to our current
print subscribers!
I do think that
print editions do have the sentimental value that an ebook
just can not provide.
For example, Falling Into Love by Takashi Kanzaki is 10.99 through the app, 9.95 on amazon's kindle, or 450 points at emanga (or you can
just go to Akadot and get the
print edition for 4.75).