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gil Downsizer Moderator
Joined: 08 Jun 2005 Posts: 18415
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Barrelman
Joined: 24 Aug 2008 Posts: 41
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Posted: Fri Aug 29, 08 6:58 pm Post subject: |
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Hi, not sure if this thread is current with you any more, but l've actually produced a few dozen books in electronic format.
The world of hard copy publishing was too much hassle to me at the time, seeing as though l published all my books as part of one long project. I looked briefly into DIY book construction and Print On Demand deals, but it just seemed too complex.
I went into eBook production. The disadvantage was that l couldn't get a deal with Amazon - who weren't taking any eBooks or CDROMs at the time. The advantage was that it was so easy.
I used Adobe Acrobat. I passworded the finished documents. I then uploaded them to eBookMall.com .
The problem with eBookMall is that it is very USA-centered, so your eBook will be competing against really cheap eBooks (� versus $ - $ is way more competitive at the moment). Mind you, your market sounds like it will be a British crowd so that won't matter.
I think that's the only problem l can think about eBookMall.
You don't even need an ISBN number. Mind you, ISBN numbers give you a huge potential worldwide market - they will make your books compatible with every bookseller's and distributor's cataloguing system. Also, CDROMs and eBooks will never be more popular than hard copy.
But consider that: eBooks can be OCRed (and they usually are already text-recognisable when created from a word-processed document) and thus they are fully searchable, and they can be bookmarked. Searchability and bookmarks give a huge advantage over hard copy, especially to researchers.
The possibilities increase when you get your eBook onto Google Booksearch, but you will need an ISBN number for that.
By the way, ISBNs come across as a necessary rip-off. They are extremely expensive when bought singly (and not many people offer that option), and the marketting line is "if you're serious, then you will buy 10" - they are often brokered in lots of 10 for a couple of 100 �.
Apparently, some ISBNs are actually the property of the publisher who sells it to you, which has ramifications that i forget because l quickly went off the idea of getting ISBNs. |
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Barrelman
Joined: 24 Aug 2008 Posts: 41
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Barrelman
Joined: 24 Aug 2008 Posts: 41
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Barefoot Andrew Downsizer Moderator
Joined: 21 Mar 2007 Posts: 22780 Location: In the 17th century
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