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Sharon/ LFrog1386
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Nov 11, 2011 08:46AM
LOL I read it! I read it! I am curious, in your opinion, for someone who does not yet have an E Reader, what do you think is the best bet? I hear Kindle isn't great because you are limited to Amazon purchases. People used to recommend the Nook for that reason but according to your data, it is not going to last. Is this Kobo the new way to go? Or is it like anything else, obsolete 10 minutes after you buy it?
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I am a big Amazon fan so maybe you can't trust my judgment, but I just don't see people buying many books elsewhere and dumping it to their other devices--convenience is a big part of the value of ebooks, and if you have to move a lot of files and wires around, then it takes the fun out of it, plus prices are generally the same in every market.I just don't have a lot of faith in the Nook, because I feel BN is hot on the tail of Borders, and it may drag the Nook into bankruptcy with it--and then what? Kobo looks promising but to be honest I don't know enough about it. They seem to have a wide selection, even if the store isn't so easy to search.
If you are buying a tablet, then you can get both Nook and Kindle apps and read all you want, but I prefer the easy-on-the-eyes e-ink of Kindle.
5. In five years, there will be about 200 bookstores in the United States, centered in the major cities.GRADE: A. And you can say good-bye to Barnes & Noble, which has pretty much gutted its shelf space to start selling Nooks and carpets and toys and beanie babies and iPads. (I guess it depends on at what point you stop considering B&N a "bookstore" and start calling it a "general merchandiser.")===============================================
This is an interesting one. I think Borders went out of business because of poor management more than ebooks. They had the occasional 40% off a single title coupon or something similar, that would draw me to actually buy 1 item, but their pricing was ridiculous. A friend of mine took a book they had a $40 price tag on to the manager and showed then MSRP of $30 on it. The manager said that is just a suggested price, and they can sell it for whatever they wanted. Pricing on CDs was bad and even worse on DVDs, huge markups. I had a Borders close to me with a bit of drive to get to B&N, so I'd go to Borders regularly and look through the books and music, to see what was new, bring a pen and paper, write down the titles of what looked interesting and caught my eye, and then buy it later than day for much less from overstock.com. I even went to the store when the SciFi section was 40% off, and still didn't buy because overstock still had their prices lower!! So I laughed hard when Borders went out of business... until I realized that in the end the store employees get screwed by being jobless and the execs that made the stupid decisions get early retirement and probably an extra big bonus when they divvy up the final dollars from the out of business sales!
I've only recently been to B&N since Borders closed, but the store has been crowded...they essentially doubled-up on business when Borders shut down. I did however see that the Nooks are front and center when you walk in and they have a permanent salesperson there... they don't work the register, or sweep, or stock, they stand with the Nooks all day to sell you one. BUT, what really has me wondering about this is, at B&N, the coffee store area is still packed with pretentious people with MacBook Airs. I'm seeing lots of used bookstores and independent bookstores going out of business, and Borders is gone... SO WHERE ARE THOSE PEOPLE GOING TO GO? B&N exists so that they have somewhere to exist! So B&N can't go out of business can it? Doesn't the government protect endangered species? Where will pretentious people with glasses that were popular in the 50s, sip their venti soymilk lattes with Macs and a book or two on the table trying to look smarter than us have to go if B&N goes away?
Is it really possible physical bookstores will go away?
sidenote: I've been buying largely on smashwords, since I can get both .mobi and .epub files. Doing a little reading of the Kindle books on PC. Kindle for PC works better than I thought it would, with features like changing the background color and brightness... I feel I'm getting a Kindle feel, just lugging around a big reader that generates too much heat. Will probably finally get an e-reader after Christmas... so you are telling me, that without doubt, I need to go with Kindle, even though I hate their proprietary format? I'm a huge believe in open formats, and originally thought I'd never go the Kindle route. Apple finds way to charge more on ITunes with their own format, I worry that Amazon will jack up prices if they completely win the market share war.
I don't wonder IF book stores will go out of business, I only wonder WHEN. I used to own a video rental store. Don't see any of those around anymore, do you? Book stores will go the same route. Everything will be online or at your local library. You either buy the book from a website or download it to your e-reader of choice. It's a sad state of affairs, but it is reality.
Thanks, Byron--I think the challenge for BN is much larger than "management," it's a fundamental shift in the way people consume and buy books. I was in the newspaper business for 13 years and saw the same challenge--you simply can't turn back technological progress. Driving to the store and paying $30 for a hardcover doesn't compare well with sitting at home and buying a $5 ebook.I don't think Amazon will be the only player--I think Kobo is a strong #2 emerging. There will remain competitors, and I like Amazon, but it's certainly not the only choice.
Sharon, I make the video store comparison often. What a lot of people don't realize is the number of new independent bookstore openings INCREASED last year--so there is an opening for customer-friendly localized bookstores.
That's good news, Scott. As I mentioned before, I met one of my favorite authors at a local bookstore and if it weren't for them, I never would have met her. I love the idea of strolling the isles, looking for a cover to jump out at me, spending hours immersed in reading dust jackets. I used to love Waldenbooks; it was big enough to carry a wide variety but small enough to feel like it was independently owned. Now it takes me an hour to get to the closest independent store, which isn't convenient at all. Our last local book store went out of business two years ago. Maybe we'll see it come back again some day soon!
It's more realistic to expect a combination store that has books as just one revenue source--usually coffee sells better than books!
LOL sad but true! But if that is the case, they why are all these B&N stores closing? And didn't Borders have a coffee shop, too? I just don't ever want to get relegated to buying books from Wal-Mart. EVER.


