Sentences with phrase «pages read»

Not insignificantly, over half of that income came from the «pages read» of Bloody Lessons and Deadly Proof in KU.
80 Days PC Review - Page 1 from TweakTown's online gaming review, article and guide content pages Read the gaming review.
Pac - Pix DS Review - Page 1 from TweakTown's online gaming review, article and guide content pages Read the gaming review.
Geometry Wars: Retro Evolved 2 Xbox 360 Review - Page 1 from TweakTown's online gaming review, article and guide content pages Read the gaming review.
Arguably, judging books by pages read means it's about pleasing the reader, now more than ever.
Parents can find out which words the child learned, how many pages they read, and how long their child spent reading each day.
Kessel said one of the new features of the Kindle 2 is text - to - voice, which allows a user, for example, to read 15 pages on the screen, then drive a car and have the next few pages read to him by voice.
After we put all our books (45 +) in KU, we earn 33 % on Amazon - sales and 66 % on KENP (pages read).
That's over 3 billion pages read!
Of course, the one company with the power to push back against the publishers is Amazon, and I do think this episode gives additional color to Kindle Unlimited, Amazon's own subscription program that, crucially, pays authors based on the number of pages read.
Revenue is based on the number of page views — i.e., the number of times an actual page of a book is read compared to the overall number of pages read across all titles.
2.5 million readers in KU is a lot of readers, and because our calculations are based on pages read it's likely that the 2.5 Million number represents the active readers enrolled in KU.
Amazon now will pay authors based on pages read, which is not resonating well with most authors.
Many retrailers, including Amazon, pay self - publishers on the basis of pages read.
«Our total payout from the KDP Select Global Fund will be unaffected by the transition to KENPC v3.0, and the amount you earn from the global fund will continue to be determined based on your share of total pages read by Kindle Unlimited (KU) and Kindle Owners» Lending Library (KOLL) customers.
They would pay royalties based on the number of pages read, instead of qualified borrows.
Now, its all about pages read, if you read 5 pages and move on, author hardly makes anything, where is the allure to try and make money in this program?
The new KENPC version will be applied uniformly to all KDP Select books and used to measure all pages read
If a customer previously borrowed your book and is still reading it, any new pages read will be based on KENPC v3.0.»
«You can see your book's KENPC v3.0 listed on the «Promote and Advertise» page in your Bookshelf, and you can also see total pages read on your Sales Dashboard report.
Also, since I started reading more print books again, I have a new appreciation for the feeling of holding a book in your hands, the tactile sensation of turning the pages, of seeing your progression visually as the pages read become more plentiful and the pages yet unread decrease in number.
The ten most popular books are paid an extra $ 25,000, on top of the amount of pages read.
But given the size of the pot and total pages read is increasing, that means the subscriber pool is growing.
With box sets the impact of pages read earnings is often very significant.
But just recently they have began taking measures that hurt new authors, such as the latest kindle library adjustment which only allows payment to the author depending on the number of pages read.
Then, over the last few months, I've been seeing the same sort of decline in payment for pages read that I saw with the original KDP Select reads.
Not only do these KU users respond well to Box Sets, the pages read really add up.
Best - guess, they started counting «pages read» as «pages reached outside of Page Flip».
Lower the number of pages read and the value of each page increases.
Before dealing with how Amazon counts pages read, let's talk about one of those things Amazon provided to customers because — again, the customer experience is the biggest thing for them.
Each month, Amazon allocate a total amount of money to the program which is then divided up by the total number of pages read.
In exchange for pages read, authors get money.
My take on this is that Amazon had two choices: either they could over-count pages read by including Page Flip pages, or they could under - count the pages read by excluding the Page Flip pages.
It also tracks the number of books finished, the total time spent reading, the average number of pages read per minute and much more.
The way KENPC is figured is not known, the way pages read are calculated isn't at all clear, and what authors are going to get paid per month for each page read is variable and has been going down for a while.
This created a marketplace that turned off a decent percentage of readers, and so Amazon changed the way they paid authors to a system that counted actual pages read.
I can check and see the pages read adding up and feel a bright, shiny, inner glow.
You'll be paid for borrows based on pages read.
Also, from a large - scale view, it doesn't affect the payouts in any system where the number of pages read is one of the numbers used to calculate how much each page is worth.
Your decision as to whether this is worth it will depend on the amount you expect to sell in the other markets weighed up against the amount you could generate through Kindle Unlimited pages read revenue.
On this basis, Amazon's Kindle Unlimited is perhaps the purest subscription model around: it now pays authors a fee based on the number of pages read from a pool of money it alone decides, representing an economically viable if ultimately unpalatable future.
But, again, not knowing how normalized pages read compares to the number of downloads makes this an interesting mental exercise but really doesn't answer the question of how many of the borrows are actually being read all the way through.
It would help if Amazon let us know the number of downloads as well as number of normalized pages read.
Authors get a bit of royalty for pages read in these shares through the Kindle Unlimited and Kindle Online Lending Library programs.
They offered the ability to pay per pages read.
When you read a print book, you consciously or subconsciously track your progress by sensing the ratio of the pages read to the pages yet to be read.
I tend to be a slow, meticulous reader, and because of this I'm often very aware of the number of pages I read in any given amount of time, but with Fates and Furies I completely lose track — the language entrances me so much that I've devoured the book in big gulps, the way I read as a kid.
I have little patience for those complaining about Amazon at least trying to normalize payments to authors based on number of pages read instead of times a title is read to 10 %.
In most countries, the data fees are equivalent to 2 US cents per 1000 pages read.
I also gained a few reviews, and earned money from the Kindle pages read.
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