Wednesday, April 06, 2011

A Book Publisher's Folly

I'm starting to buy the electronic version of the new books I like. The main reasons are 1. They take no space on the shelf., 2. They are searchable., and 3. They are indestructible. I've bought quite a few recently to read on my computers.

Yesterday, when I went to Amazon to buy another one, I was surprised to see this:
This is so foolish for the publisher to limit the availability of electronic books! It took me 1 minute to search and download a copy of the book floating around in the internet after I saw that warning. Indeed, 45 seconds of the one minute were spent cursing the stupid policy.

I was begging to pay them for goods easily found for free and they refused :-(

So, it seems book publishers haven't learned from the music and movie publishers' experiences yet.

As a heavy consumer of books, I would like to suggest that all physical books should include an electronic version for the back up purpose and all pure electronic books should be priced reasonably--they should be priced substantially less than the paperback version. I would be very happy to keep spending money buying books if publishers are reasonable.

2 comments:

Chris said...

Kindle and Nook readers bash high e-book pricing with angry one-star reviews

Read more: http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-18438_7-20051201-82.html#ixzz1IvLNpw35

Ko Saipetch said...

Thank you for the link :-)