Here is a look at the latest version of Kindle.
Professor Elam
Accounting & Investing Info for San Antonio A & M
about
4 responses to “Amazon’s Kindle Pricey but Better”
-
As I see it soon very soon we will be paperless, bookless, and jobless. What is going to happen to all those jobs that produce the books? Yes technology is taken over, but it is creating it’s own recession. Not everyone can adapt to computer technology.
LikeLike
-
Good question, what is going on here is an attempt by book companies to increase their contribution margin which is sales minus variable cost.Decreasing the cost of paper and printing indeed saves some trees. I don’t think printing jobs are going away but understand that modern printing techniques have eliminated most of the labor involved. A side feature of computerized printing is that finally low cost small volume jobs are realistic. I just had a small photo book done for a friend, twenty pages for a mere ten bucks, such a deal, and they loved it!
IBM used to say machines should work people should think. Ever been in a newspaper print plant? It ruined my Grandad’s hearing and to me was an incredibly boring job.
Indeed the ability to print in small volumes as well as on line opens up the prospect of budding authors getting a chance, my blog would not be possible in the ‘old’ publishing world. I have corresponded with several students in the last hour right here from my apartment. Handy.LikeLike
-
Years ago my dad worked @ the San Antonio Light (it’s gone….) as a pressman. Spending time in the pressroom was amazing to me, watching the HUGE paper rolls become a newspaper. I don’t personally care for “e-books”, still an old school like to highlight the paragraph kinda girl. Technology is great, but there is nothing like falling asleep while reading an accounting book……hehe
LikeLike
-
I read also this article that has some information about the e-books, they believe that it would take longer to be adapted, since there is a lot of older people that are used to the traditional books.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=100584020
I believe that they are going to loose money, just like the music industry, that once they went into electronic form, anyone had access to them, same thing will happen to the books. Everyone is going to be able to download them.
I would also like to make a comment about Laura’s comment. I know that not everybody can adapt that easy to new technology, but I believe that is just a matter of being shown how to use all of these technology tools.LikeLike
Leave a comment