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posted by martyb on Friday February 23 2018, @11:11AM   Printer-friendly
from the roar-of-the-dinosaur-publisher dept.

Arnaud Nourry, the CEO of Lagardère Publishing (the parent company of Hachette Book Group), gave an interview to Scroll.in in which he claims, "the eBook is a stupid product."

In the US and UK, the ebook market is about 20% of the total book market, everywhere else it is 5%-7% because in these places the prices never went down to such a level that the ebook market would get significant traction. I think the plateau, or rather slight decline, that we're seeing in the US and UK is not going to reverse. It's the limit of the ebook format. The ebook is a stupid product. It is exactly the same as print, except it's electronic. There is no creativity, no enhancement, no real digital experience. We, as publishers, have not done a great job going digital. We've tried. We've tried enhanced or enriched ebooks – didn't work. We've tried apps, websites with our content – we have one or two successes among a hundred failures. I'm talking about the entire industry. We've not done very well.

For an in-depth explanation of Arnaud Nourry's comments, we go to The Digital Reader:

Hachette's sales are low because Hachette keeps their ebook prices high. If you check the Author Earnings report, you will see that ebooks make up a significant part of the market. And it's not just a tiny group of readers who like ebooks; almost all of romance has gone digital, as well as around half of the SF market.

This guy understands so little about ebooks that it is almost frightening.

[...] They've tried enhanced ebooks, ebook apps, and even ebooks on websites, all because Nourry doesn't understand ebooks as a product. And soon they will be trying video games.

Let me say that again so it sinks in.

The CEO of a major multi-national book publishing conglomerate does not understand his company's products or his company's markets.

This point is so mind-boggling because it is really not that hard to find out why consumers like ebooks: just go ask them.

Consumers like ebooks because we can change the font size. We like ebooks because we can carry a hundred ebooks on a smartphone. We also like being able to search the text, add notes that can later be accessed from a web browser, and easily share those notes with other readers.

Here's an editorial rebuttal from The Guardian:

[...] The built-in, one-tap dictionary is a boon for Will Self fans. And as an author, I'm fascinated by the facility that shows you phrases other readers have highlighted; what is it about this sentence that resonated with dozens of humans? It's an illicit glimpse into the one place even a writer's imagination can never really go: readers' minds. And Kindle's Whispersync facility lets the reader fluidly alternate between reading a book and listening to it. What are these if not enhancements to the reading experience?

And then there's the simplest, most important enhancement of all: on any e-reader, you can enlarge the text. That in itself is a quiet revolution. Page-sniffers who dismiss ebooks out of hand are being unconsciously ableist. For decades the partially sighted were limited to the large print section of their local library, limited to only the usual, bestselling, suspects.

[...] Finally, Nourry claims there is no digital experience. Isn't that the point? If it's got graphics, noise or animation, it's no longer a book – it's a computer game or a movie. Just as I write disconnected from the internet and in silence, I don't want my books to do other stuff. The beauty of the book, in a world of digital noise, is the purity of the reading experience – and there's nothing stupid about that.


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  • (Score: 5, Informative) by damnbunni on Friday February 23 2018, @01:16PM (2 children)

    by damnbunni (704) on Friday February 23 2018, @01:16PM (#642348) Journal

    Major advantages for me are that ebooks are easier to carry and physically easier to read. I have a reader with actual buttons for page-turn, and can hold it in one hand and click with my thumb to go to the next page, or leave it flat on a desk and not have to worry about the book trying to close itself.

    I don't like it for reference works, but for novels or biographies or other 'start at the beginning and read to the end' things, I really prefer ebooks to paper at this point. Especially since I can backlight the page if I want to. (Or not, if the room is brightly lit or I'm outside.)

    The vast majority of my ebooks are DRM-free - even the purchased ones. I read a lot of Baen authors, and Baen sells no-DRM ebooks direct from their site. In every format except PDF, because PDF sucks for reading on screens.

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  • (Score: 2) by frojack on Friday February 23 2018, @06:29PM

    by frojack (1554) on Friday February 23 2018, @06:29PM (#642527) Journal

    I don't like it for reference works, but for novels or biographies or other 'start at the beginning and read to the end' things

    Exactly.

    The readers are clumsy for page flipping back and forth to tables and charts. Desktop readers are somewhat better, web readers with multiple tabs open are better yet, but somehow three fingers in a book or postit notes hanging from key pages still works best for reference manuals and such.

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  • (Score: 2) by deimtee on Saturday February 24 2018, @03:12AM

    by deimtee (3272) on Saturday February 24 2018, @03:12AM (#642854) Journal

    PDF sucks to read on screen because that is exactly NOT what it was designed for. It was meant to be a Portable/Printable Data Format, that would look the same on any screen and when printed on paper. It was basically meant for the print industry, and early versions (less than Acrobat 4) did a brilliant job compared to anything else at the time.

    Then adobe got greedy and wanted to own the online world too. They started adding 'online' and 'interactive' shit, stopped embedding fonts unless you had expensive licences, optimised for 'online viewing' and basically went to shit. On behalf of the print industry I would like to say "Fuck Them Sideways with a Rusty Spanner".

    Back on topic, I have a Kobo Aura One about one tenth filled with 400 epubs on it. It's awesome.

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