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Print or Ebooks?
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JoAnn Hill

An iPad or similar weight/size tablets isn't as comfortable for reading as nook, kobo, kindle or other ereaders.
If I'm carting around an iPad in a purse, bag or backpack--it's just not that more difficult to tuck one or more ereaders in with it (nor does it add that much more weight).

Also I tend to stop listening when I do something else because I tunnel focus.

E-books don’t have to be the death of print
eBooks and print can co-exist
Readers win when libraries add e-books, but preserve print, as well
Japan's Ebook Readers Fans of Print, Too


April 1 through June 30, 2015 - 9 units
Format/Units Sold/Royalty
Paperback: 2 (22.2%) $6.90
E-Book: 7 (77.8%) $9.45
Audio Book on CD: 0 ( 0.0%) $0
Audio Book Download: 0 ( 0.0%) $0
Aug. 9, 2011 though June 30, 2015 - 944 units
Format/Units Sold/Royalty
Paperback: 467 (49.5%) $1,485.60
E-Book: 421 (44.6%) $506.25
Audio Book on CD: 34 ( 3.6%) $127.50
Audio Book Download: 22 ( 2.3%) $72.60



My experience is the opposite. I make very few paperback sales, no more than two or three a month. The rest are all ebooks.

As an author I take pains to make both formats thoroughly readable and enjoyable. I do notice that friends and acquaintances tend to buy print, and other readers tend to go digital. Also, print is obviously necessary for book fairs and public events.
I do love both though, as a reader and an author.





E-Books Are Damaging Your Health: Why We Should All Start Reading Paper Books Again

The kindle recall study does not disclose the study parameters. Were the readers reading more and in different situations, on the train, on the street, in between appointments, and so on, which would mean that the reader's mind was not as fully immersed in the book as he would if sitting in an armchair at home.

Also, why not use both, utilizing tech during the day and saving paper book reading for bed? Problem solved.

Moderation in all things is usually the recipe to avoiding health issues.

Medical analysis, my foot. The writer had an opinion and sought to support it. That's not exactly scientific. The few issues that have merit have to do with specific types of devices, not e-books themselves, and those can be addressed.

Evening use of light-emitting eReaders negatively affects sleep, circadian timing, and next-morning alertness
Real life trumps laboratory in matters of public health
Reply to Zeitzer: Good science, in or out of the laboratory, should prevail
Managing Media: Reflections on Media and Video Game Use From a Therapeutic Perspective
Recognizing Academic Performance, Sleep Quality, Stress Level, and Mental Health using Personality Traits, Wearable Sensors and Mobile Phones
A tablet that shifts the clock
Ophthalmic and Physiological Optics


http://www.phonearena.com/news/10-bri...

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Nice to see that there are a few more available than I thought. I'll give Lux Lite a try, I don't think I've tried it yet. I use f.lux on my computers and have for years, and I'm constantly searching for something that works as well on Android.



Yes, it looks like they don´t.






Abigail,
Please don't allow one bad experience to discourage you from considering multiple formats for your work. Choice of format is driven by readers' personal preference. The length of time a book has been available usually has little or nor impact. Refer to message 108 for specific examples.


For the first book it was a pretty good arrangement—the publisher had an excellent designer, and it was important to me that the book look a certain way. When I went with them, I did not think as much as I should have about what happened after publication. I believed that since it was a genre fiction book and the genre had “fan” sites that reviewed such books, its way would be relatively smooth. Have since had quite the education about present-day realities of marketing and publicity!


It's something that publishers tried to do from the beginning of ebooks - windowed releases, due to fear that ebook sales will cannibalize print sales. Some still do it, but it's becoming less common, thankfully. I don't know why they couldn't see that most people have a preference, and making ebook buyers wait is going to lose sales and waste a huge chunk of the viable marketing window.

But since I put attention into promoting the ebook version, sales have blown past the paperback and are continuing to roll along. One big advantage of an ebook is that an author can set a short term discount price such as $0.99 to get sales and reviews happening. Not a lot of royalty on those days but nothing to lose because no print costs.
I have come to believe that ebook sales are my future.
I love the paperback and won't abandon it, but I plan to put 90% of my marketing effort into ebook. YMMV, my genre is hard scifi and I am guessing that genre matters.
My cellphone is within reach 24hrs a day, so that means that all my current reading is available at the touch of a button. I have a tablet, but I rarely use it to read. It is just to bulky. I started reading ebooks when I got my first PDA, and those screens were awful, but the convenience factor trumps everything for me.
As for screens, I am an author and spend most of the day on the screen. I also do CGI art, so more time staring at pixel level items on the screen. I suppose I've just grown used to it.