(«Truce called in battle
over ebook rights» via The Guardian)
Not exact matches
Click on
over right here &... Continue reading Paleo Olé
ebook!
Tomorrow I'll give you a guided tour of the
ebook but it's available for download at any time using this link or by entering your email
over to the
right hand side of the screen.
Our latest
ebook here at Epolitics.com, «How Campaigns Can Use the Internet to Win in 2012,» is galloping
right along: in the three weeks since its release, it's been downloaded directly
over 900 times and purchased in the Amazon store...
Habits app for iOS Sunwarrior < == 10 % off all Sunwarrior products (free shipping
over $ 100) Joy McCarthy's website (Joyous Health) Joy McCarthy — Joyous Health (book) * Joy McCarthy — Feel Joyous, Look Great After Pregnancy (and beyond)(
ebook) Joy McCarthy — Eat Well (online classes)-- no longer available Joy's previous TUHP interview (# 12) Leanne Phillipson - webb — Sprout
Right (book) Patrick Halford — Optimum Nutrition Before, During and After Pregnancy (book) Pam England & Rob Horowitz — Birthing from Within (book) Toronto Yoga Mamas Birth As We Know It (documentary) Toronto Birth Centre Marni's Superfood Power Ball recipe
One of the polarizing issues in the U.S.
ebook market
right now is the conflict
over public library access to
ebook titles for lending, but we may be able to take a lesson from Libranda's new partnership with OverDrive to afford access to new and bestselling
ebook titles to library patrons in Spain.
I have
over # 80 of
ebooks on my WH Smith bookshelf, including a pre-ordered book I should be able to download
right about now.
Since then, she's published her earnings on her blog (she made
over $ 250,000 in 2015) and taken on an agent and a publisher for a print - only deal (she kept her
ebook rights).
Amazon is adding new
ebooks at a rate of about 13,500 a month
right now (based on new
ebooks added
over the last three months).
Five years later: we've published well
over 200
ebooks, we've incorporated, we've doubled our membership, our
ebooks are in libraries worldwide, sold by nearly one hundred retailers worldwide, and we've just sold the audio
rights to
over one hundred of our books.
With
right around 75,000
ebooks in its library, an exponential increase
over the original launch, Kindle users have borrowed an astounding 259,000 individual check - outs of those titles in December alone.
There has been a lot of discussion and speculation
over the years as to what constitutes the
right price for an
ebook, especially one by a self - published author.
Right now in the USA there is said to be
over 21 million e-readers in circulation and many libraries are seeing a boom period in
ebook borrowing.
As Buroker points out, bundles are selling quite well on
ebook retail sites
right now, as readers look for content to read
over the holidays and as they invest money in a savings such as this.
But I've passed
over quite a few books recently because the
ebook was dearer than the paperback and I wanted something to read
right then.
Jeanette is not just the author of today's book, When It's
Right (reviewed here), but also one of the books on my Best
Ebook Romances of the Year list
over at Library Journal, Take What You Want (reviewed earlier this year).
I think you're
right though:
ebooks will continue to pick up
over the next few years.
Click on each link below each
ebook to jump
right over to the author's page and start downloading.
Being able to keep most if not all of my
rights, keep my
ebook prices reasonable, and have control
over timing, etc..
As I have been experiencing, learning, teaching, and writing about on - demand self publishing
over the past decade or two [I actually started self publishing
ebooks in 1993 or 4], one area of book design has slid
right past most of the new authors.
«For schools,
eBooks come with different
rights for different students, the books need to be accessible on school computers and on personal devices, and some electronic textbooks can be
over two gigabytes each!
When the world's largest publishers struck
ebook distribution deals with Amazon.com Inc.
over the past several months, they seemed to get what they wanted: the
right to set the prices of their titles and avoid the steep discounts the online retail giant often applies.
I choose not to put DRM or Digital
Rights Management on my
ebooks, so I always move the slider
over to no, or the red x.
After polling all of you about the
right price for an
eBook device and the kinds of documents you are buying, as well as doing a lot of research
over the last couple months, it's clear that the
eBooks market is growing.
With
right around 75,000
ebooks in its library, an exponential increase
over the original launch, Kindle users have borrowed an astounding 259,000 individual check - outs of... [Read more...]
Right now, Kobo has the largest advantage with
over 2.5 million
ebooks and the most manga / graphic novels out of all the major digital retailers.
The Augen e-reader comes with
over 200 classic
eBooks so you can get reading
right away.
It's a good thing she did; as the
rights» owner to the digital versions, she sold
over $ 500 million worth of the
ebooks through her own Pottermore marketplace in the first month of sales alone.
If you compare the standard of strategic thinking (in the matter of
ebooks) in Amazon to that which appears to have taken place
over the past few years in the large publishing houses, then Amazon can only be
right to demand terms in the way that they are.
Assignment of author's copyright and of the publisher's
rights to publish and distribute the work
over the breadth of content formats (including
ebook, audio, performance, etc.) and
over what geographical territories.
Right now, the DRM - free status of these books, including
over 1500 titles from O'Reilly Media as well as the works of these recently added smaller presses, would mean that the books remain accessible even after the borrowing period has expired on the library
ebook.
The chair of the Society of Authors, Tom Holland, has hit out at publishers» attempt to seize control
over electronic
rights, calling
ebook deals that lock authors in for the duration of copyright «not remotely fair».
Hop
over, get a little bit more information about the
ebook and just download the book from the links provided at the top
right.
It would be pretty cool to automatically have access to
over a million
ebooks on a Kindle
right out of the box, even if they aren't a bunch of NYT best sellers.
Used
ebooks are a hot topic
right now, with Apple and Amazon each pursuing a patent
over reselling digital content and as a result sparking a debate on the legality, ethics, and morality of a second - hand marketplace for products that don't decay.
«
Right now putting an
ebook into Amazon and having them sell it on autopilot can get a lot more of the total market than will be the case
over time as a more fully articulated and global
ebook infrastructure builds out.»
Waterstones will be sending out emails to customers starting June 14th, 2016 with instructions on how to transfer accounts to Kobo in order to retain most of their
ebook collection (a few books are bound not to make the transfer, as Kobo is unlikely to have the
rights to every single title that Waterstones has sold
over the past 5 + years).
They are making 25 % or so from
ebooks when they are signing
over rights to Publishers.
I keep reminding publishers that when readers want to buy an
ebook and can't because of distribution resrtictions, they're as likely as not to run
right over to Usenet or The Pirate Bay and download the damned thing for free.
Publishers are
right when they say there's a role for them in an
ebook world... Although authors will continue to self - publish, the debate that matters in the future is what the basket of services will be that authors require and what will be the
right price for them... good covers, changing covers, dynamic pricing, constantly improved metadata, monitoring to catch glitch take - downs, as well as developmental editing, line - editing, copy - editing, and proofreading... The lines are drawn for that discussion and the opinions are really all
over the lot.
I can't imagine the publisher being happy to do editing and such on a book and then just handing an epub / mobi version
over to the writer to use with their own
rights, but on the other hand I can't imagine a book having slightly different edited versions between the
ebook and the hard copies.
(1) Tabloids in the UK reported
over last weekend that pornographic
ebooks were appearing
right beside children's literature on the Web site of WHSmith, which offers «Books, Stationery, Gifts, and Much More.»
Browse the entire Kobo eBookstore
right from your Kobo Aura HD
over Wi Fi; enjoy a selection of
over 5 million
eBooks and truly personalized recommendations from Kobo Picks.
Many authors who had deals
over 10 years ago will own their
ebook rights, so it's worth checking your contracts to see if you can publish digital versions, even if a traditional publisher owns your print
rights.
This becomes increasingly relevant
over the long haul, especially since many authors never get their
rights back if
ebook sales limp along at a certain level, making it hard for them to personally profit from the backlist.
The latest version of Digital Editions
ebook reader from Adobe seems to have corrected the past flaws and now collects data on books with DRM (Digital
Rights Management) only, sending it
over a secure connection.
The
eBook User's Bill of
Rights Every eBook user should have the following rights: the right to use eBooks under guidelines that favor access over proprietary limitations the right to access eBooks -LS
Rights Every
eBook user should have the following
rights: the right to use eBooks under guidelines that favor access over proprietary limitations the right to access eBooks -LS
rights: the
right to use
eBooks under guidelines that favor access
over proprietary limitations the
right to access
eBooks -LSB-...]
Yes, print is still preferred among kids and educators, but despite that, I personally prefer print
over digital, so unless I was doing and adult novella or something YA (Teens with access to e-readers do read
ebooks, even if it's still particularly a «grown - ups» market
right now), and tech savvy folks like the convenience of digital, and I can understand that, despite my preference for print, but in general I wouldn't feel comfortable being
ebook only in every circumstance, but I try to keep up with the key news so if I can take advantage of something digital I know where to turn for resources.
This is the almost perfect example of how one might expect a pure
ebook play to develop
over time, publishing
ebooks to a time sensitive market while selling the
rights to someone else for a paperback edition, enabling them to keep stock costs lows and cash flow high and letting someone else worry about the odd economics of the traditional model!
Then in 2010,
ebooks slid
over to primary
rights, meaning a deal was non-negotiable if the publisher could not license at least
ebook and print
rights.