Sentences with phrase «than the print version»

Additionally, approximately 50 % said they'd do the same even if the e-book is only $ 2 - 3 cheaper than the print version.
In fact, the audio has done far better than print version, which I understand is common in the Spanish market.
I have little interest in those types of content; the only one I'd consider are magazines, but not so long as they're charging more than print versions.
People will only buy e-books if the price is significantly lower than the print version.
The Web version is more convenient and easier to use than the print version.
But... is somebody can tell me, please, why there is — now — a lot of e-books that are sold more $ $ $ $ than the print version?
You can also buy subscriptions that are usually very affordable than their print versions.
Certainly it makes sense that an ebook version of a book would cost less to produce than a print version of a book, because copying data is cheaper than printing on paper.
The cost of the digital version of books is also about 20 to 50 percent less costly than the printed version.
To find shades that work perfectly together, pick from a paint chart that uses the actual paint rather than a printed version.
Additionally, approximately 50 % said they'd do the same even if the ebook is only $ 2 - 3 cheaper than the print version.
It doesn't strike me as odd that people would see the price of an electronic book and expect it to be less than the print version.
Given that the Web and mobile versions are so much easier to use than the print version, the even - better part is that they are also cheaper.
«If we don't publish ebooks, our publications still would appear on a lot of websites and forums, from which people can download the publications free of charge, even though with lower quality than the printing versions.
An audiobook of a bestseller is more likely to be more expensive than the print version — and in the same range as the cost of an audiobook you'd purchase on a CD in a bookstore.
Dark Horse is now releasing all its comics simultaneously in digital and print formats, although some of the digital comics are priced higher than the print versions due to Apple's pricing policies.
eBooks are a bit more complex to put out there than the print versions.
Commentators on various sites reporting this development had some harsh criticism for both iPad and Conde Nast, maintaining that the cost of an app version of many magazines, not just those published by Conde Nast, cost the reader far more than the print version over the cost of a year and that print subscribers are denied access to app versions.
These apps incorporate photos, GPS location and other types of content into Lee's books, making them a lot more usable on an iPhone or iPad than the printed versions ever were.
After all, how many e-editions actually have less functionality than the print version?
The ranking from an environmental point of view was in general that tablet e-paper and the web based newspaper with a shorter reading time (10 min), was giving rise to a lower environmental impact than the printed version.
In law, e-books have a number of advantages over their print equivalents: they can be searched full - text by keyword; for many e-books, hypertext links are provided for cases and legislation to allow the reader to click to get the full - text of the case or legislation; and e-books can presumably be updated more quickly and inexpensively than a print version.
The usual factors to explain why books remain print - bound include the preference of many for the «feel» of a book (and the ease of flipping through pages); the fact that e-books are usually only best read on a large monitor (on a desktop), making them less portable than a print version; the lack of content in e-books; and the lack of a market and established distribution methods, a point made earlier on SLAW through a posting by John Davis.
(Furthermore, eBook consolidations of legislation are much less likely to be left behind in conference rooms than print versions.)
Basically, in the windowing model (again, if I'm understanding this correctly), the e-book versions, priced significantly cheaper than their print versions, would not be available until weeks, maybe even months, after the print versions have hit the shelves.
Ebooks are usually — and increasingly — priced significantly lower than the print version of the book, so if you're publishing to both formats, you need to consider the differential you're going to create between the formats.
«If we don't publish ebooks, our publications still would appear on a lot of websites and forms, from which people can download the publications free of charge, even though with lower quality than the printing versions.
***** Curiously the Wall Street Journal warns readers of ebooks that ebook prices are going up and in some cases are actually higher than the print versions.
Simply wrapping your content in a shiny package designed by Adobe (s adbe) isn't going to convince vast numbers of people to pay you every month for it, especially when it costs as much as or more than the print version.
The retail price of a digital book is conventionally less than the print version, recognizing the fact that cost of production is less (cost of marketing / promotion is easily the same).
Your eBook versions should be cheaper than your print version, for example, Amazon require that your eBook be at least 20 % cheaper than your print book.
The «sell it cheaper than the print version» clause on Amazon is one I'm familiar with.
Publishers are generally setting the retail prices for the eBooks at the same level (or sometmes roughly 10 % lower) than the print version of the same book.
Publishers don't believe that digital books should be cheaper than the print versions.
to be better than the print version?
Answer: The short answer to how to price your book is at LEAST 50 % LESS than your print version.
Amazon won and everyone who buys a digital book expects the price to be a) cheaper than the print version and b) inexpensive in general.
How to Be an Author Entrepreneur to be better than the print version?
That's right, paying a few dollars more on ebooks is totally killing readers slowly or making them poorer or dumber??? The whole point of ebooks is that it is already cheaper than print version.
... I have no bricks and mortar retailing network I must be careful not to piss off (so the epub versions can be cheaper than the print version, and released day and date), nor any convoluted and delicate relationships with foreign publishers.
Subscriptions are cheaper than the print versions, but if I am going to pay for a magazine or newspaper, I'd rather read the print edition.
I'm in the UK but I always buy my 2000AD and Judge Dredd Megazine digitally: it's cheaper than the print version, comes out only two days later, and you get to download it as.
Penguin has priced the digital mass markets at $ 6.99, $ 1 less than the print versions.
Amazon are entitled (under their Terms of Sale) to reduce the price of any eBook so that a) it is less than the printed version and b) they are not undercut by any other retailers.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z