Kaffis Mark V wrote:
NephyrS wrote:
What would be awesome is if they expanded it to include past purchases...
Scan the barcode/ISBN on the back of your book, and get a discount on the e-book of the same title. Not likely to happen, though.
This brings in another issue that I believe will scare publishers/distributors off. Doing this allows multiple discounts for the same physical copy. Whether it's borrowing a friend's book and scanning it, or buying a book used (that may already have been used to get a discount on an ebook, which was not sold to the secondhand market as well), or borrowing from the library...
Whereas, requiring a receipt or granting the ebook at point of sale resolves this scary issue easily.
So what? They're still getting the money for the e-version. Instead of passing one book around 6 friends ($30). They're getting the sale for the original hardcopy, ($30) and 5 more digital editions (say $10.). That's an extra 50 bucks from the sale of one book that
they weren't getting before. Not to mention that they didn't have to pay a cent for the e-version beyond bandwidth to download. No printing, no paper, no nothing. Its all gravy, and the sooner the publishing industry understands this, the better it will be for all of us that love books.
Check out the book from the library, like it and buy the e-version for 10 bucks. That's reasonable for something new... or say 5 bucks for a mass market paperback book. Since I've got my kindle, I've bought more books in the past few months than I did all last year. In addition to the free downloads offered by some publishers, and throw in torrents of books that for some stupid reason *aren't* available in kindle format (I'm looking at YOU Black Library >.>)... I've been reading something new almost every day(an exaggeration, but still).
That brings me to another point. I would have *bought* those warhammer books if they were available electronically. Since they weren't, I had to use my search-fu for a less than lawful purpose. I still get what I want, but instead of the publisher getting my money, they get nothing. Now, if you were a publisher... wouldn't you rather have some money instead of none? I know what my answer is.