
02-19-2008, 05:15 AM
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Sage
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 667
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by Sogarth
On the one hand, I love the fact that it looks like Tor is seriously considering opening up their catalog to digital distribution. On the other hand, I have a nagging suspicion that it won't be anywhere as good as what Baen has (either their free catalog or their pay catalog), considering that they allow online reading and downloads in HTML, Ebookwise/Rocket, Mobipocket, RTF, and Microsoft Reader instead of just forcing everybody to use Adobe Acrobat. If only everybody would play nice and have it all through one system! :wink:
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Yeah, Baen is about the only one I buy from these days.
I like the eReader application, but they way they handle it just grates on me. Here's the free reader. But wait, you can pay to get Pro with more features. What features? Well, the ability to buy a font pack from us for another $20 or the ability to buy a dictionary for even more money. It just always feels like they've got one more way to part you from your money. (I know they just made Pro free, but that's not the point... the rest still works the same.)
And don't get me going on the price of the books. Sure, a 10 year old book might cost six or seven dollars, but a new book is outrageous. An example. A new book by John Varley (Rolling Thunder) is $19.96 as an ebook from eReader.com. The same book in hardback is $16.47 from Amazon. (I didn't have to search for this example. I just clicked on their site and there it was on the front page.)
In contrast, Baen books are fairly priced, of high quality, are available in a variety of formats and have no DRM. I'll spend my money with people like that, thanks.
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