Hearst Launching Kindle Competitor and Platform "By Publishers, For Publishers"
The Hearst Corporation has announced their intention to launch an e-reader competitor to Amazon's Kindle and a supporting store and platform that is much more "publisher friendly." More details are available form their official press release this morning. "Launching in 2010, Skiff provides a complete e-reading solution that includes the Skiff Service platform, Skiff Store and Skiff-enabled devices. Skiff will sell and distribute newspapers, magazines, books, blogs and other content. Skiff gives periodical publishers tools to maintain their distinct visual identities, build and extend relationships with subscribers, and deliver dynamic content and advertising to a range of dedicated e-readers and multipurpose devices."
Translates to: Screw the authors & screw the customers.
All ideas^H^H^H^H^Hprocesses in this post are Patent Pending. (as well as the process of patenting all postings)
Who's their purported customer?
How much of a markup does a brick and morter store that sells dead tree books have? I've heard that it's about 70%, so what's their problem, anyway?
That's a deal-killer for me; the first time I see an ad in a book I'll return the damned thing where I bought it. If you're going to put ads in your books, I'd damned well better get it for free or there's NO SALE.
I'll put up with ads in a printed magazine, because all I'm paying for is paper and ink, ads pay for the rest. I'm not going to pay for electronic media with ads; no paper and no ink. That's just ubergreed, double dipping, and is completely unwarranted and unacceptable.
Free Martian Whores!
They appear to ahve mid-identified their customers.
Love that their logo has a lit joint in it.
"I bless every day that I continue to live, for every day is pure profit."
I'd say this skiff was dead in the water.
crazy dynamite monkey
and BURN baby....burn!
Hey I got a great idea? Lets make everyone pay for a crummy E-Reader at high prices PLUS make them pay for the book subscriptions, PLUS sell advertising to make the reading even less enjoyable after the user gets the bill!!
PLUS we can just kill the book we sell, so the customer can never have a copy and of course, we can sell the same book to them twice!!!
-Signed...your average everday greedy American Corporate Scum.
Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
More competition and new products entering the E-reader market? Awesome. I love it
If they think I'm still going to pay the price of a hardcover book for nothing but a digital copy that can be revoked from my reader, I'M STILL NOT BUYING THIS JUNK.
The Kindle for all its annoyances attempts to be as customer centric as possible.
But this, "publisher centric" model seems really l8me... EG, advertisements built into the fabric?
Mystery, unavailable devices?
An over-leveraged print empire driving it?
Test your net with Netalyzr
I wish them luck in this venture... they're going to need it with a market that already has widely accepted semi-user-friendly devices (Amazon Kindle, Sony eReader, etc).
Also, haven't they learned their lesson already in other markets? Publisher (content-owner) friendly rarely ever is accepted by the marketplace as it wasn't designed with the end user (the people PAYING for this "service").
As I walk through the valley of death I fear no one, for I am the meanest sonova bitch in the valley!
The unit has two spikes that can deploy on command/DRM violation, rendering the user blind.
But it does have a nice display.
Any product not designed "By Customers, For Customers" is doomed to failure. Seriously, I don't want an e-book reader that makes the publisher's life easier; I want an e-book reader that makes MY life easier! And since the customer, not the publisher, is the one purchasing this device, I don't anticipate a huge number of sales.
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
...the publishers are the reason it all exists. Long live the middleman!
*waves goodbye*
In other news, publishers get their priorities right: At The Dallas News, a New "Bold Strategy": Section Editors Reporting to Sales Managers Says it all.
insecurity asks the wrong question irritation gives the wrong answer
Quote: Skiff gives periodical publishers tools to maintain their distinct visual identities, build and extend relationships with subscribers
Translation: Skiff gives periodical publishers tools to mix advertisements within content and to shove said ads down the throats of their subscribers.
I agree that the Kindle is far from perfect, but I can't say I'm too excited for this Skiff thing either.
So, why should I buy a product designed with the publishers' interests in mind over a product with the customers' interests in mind? I don't particularly care about the publishers' interests, but I do care about mine.
Who ever releases a decent e-book reader in Canada with connectivity included will have my sale. I want my global market place!
He puts up with ads in a print mag because his money pays for the ink and paper and the ads pay for the content. He means that if an electronic magazine had ads, he'd expect to get the magazine for free. The reason being that the ads pay for the content and the user pays for the delivery mechanism. He's already paid for delivery of his electronic book when he bought the reader and downloaded the content. He paid for the delivery of the paper mag content when he drove to the store and paid for the bound paper and ink.
If you don't like copyright infringement, make something that can't be copied.
Blar.
I just don't get it-- seems like the whole benefit of an e-reader is to remove the need for old-style publishers.
And that's the key.
This is an old-style publisher trying to avoid being eliminated and bankrupted as the readers desert old-style publishers for new-style "content delivered electronically" (publisherese for text documents).
By trojan-horsing a "publisher-freindly" e-book reader he hopes to hang on to some of the future market.
IMHO even if he could have gotten away with it he doomed his project by letting the readers know up front that the engineering is being done with the publishers' interest prioritized above the theirs.
But who knows? Maybe it will have enough bells and whistles, a good enough initial cost structure and advertising campaign, and/or enough desirable exclusive content (ala VHS drubbing Betamax) that he'll acquire a following.
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
Most of you are perfectly okay with companies treating their customers like cr@p. It's called the entertainment industry.
Bluray is even worse than the DVD in terms of limiting your clearly defined rights to personal use and dramatically raising the costs of entertainment. How many of you are loading up on those BluRay players/content this holiday season? You are happy about it too.
I think the basic notion that this will fail is right. It will fail because they will seek to extract similar profits AND lard on costs so early into the project that it won't ever have a chance.
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
I hope a lot of publishers go and buy these things, they'll apparently be really happy with them. I just hope they aren't expecting consumers to actually buy any.
I read the internet for the articles.
Delivering a product is hard.
I can see this style of device being accepted if it comes with magazine subscriptions (free reader with your newsweek subscription, reader copies only), but otherwise I would anticipate it flopping. People don't like cash outlay for products to use other products, leading to the razor/razorblade phenomenon.
If people can connect to one another even the smallest of voices will grow loud.
--Serial Experiments Lain
Calling Microsoft employees or users Microserfs
Shouldn't that be:
Calling Micro$oft employees or users Micro$erf$
targeted ads, complete publisher control. Where can I pick mine up, and how much will I get paid per month to use it?
93rd rule of Slashdot: No matter how obvious my sarcasm is, my comment will be taken seriously by someone.
Calling Microsoft employees or users Microserfs
Has this actually happened on slashdot since 1999?
... and then they built the supercollider.
Great. Then they can use the friggin' thing, because I sure won't.
Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
Another expensive ebook reader. I'll stick to my 7" Chinese Chuwi M70 PMP. No it's not e-ink but I don't care for e-ink anyways. I don't need any proprietary formats or DRM either. I want a adjustable brightness/contrast back lit ebook reader (text format) which my Chuwi does flawlessly and plays most music formats and HD videos as a bonus. I don't have to worry about my connected device deleting paid for books at the command of a publisher either.
Perhaps they should be more concerned with customer friendly than publisher friendly. Even though we like having competition, I am very suspicious of a company that uses phrasing like this. It usually is an indication of an underlying viewpoint and in this case I am led to believe that viewpoint is decidedly not customer centric.
Do they mean to suggeest that the only people who read papers and magazines are the people who publish them? If so this industry is in more trouble than I expected. Either way this is a moronic stance to take. Where does the customer come in?
(Those who wish to mark this off-topic are respectfully invited to get off my lawn!)
Similar to the upcoming US election results
Note that Skiff is aimed (initially) primarily at magazines and newspapers, not books. That has a different use model - not "buy and keep", but mostly "buy, skim & read, discard". Sure, Kindle does magazines and newspapers too - but clearly not as well as might be done with a larger, color display.
Websites already fill this need, mostly for free - but web publishers can't cover costs of in-depth news and make a profit.
To get the market share they need AND avoid hardware freeloaders, Skiff will have to offer a hardware + 3 year multi-magazine subscription bundle for at least $10/month, probably $15. They can beat out paper magazines by giving people who'd normally subscribe to only one or two magazines, access to dozens for the same price, creating a higher perceived value.
I bet this thing is going to be locked down tighter than Fort Knox! They will probably bring out their own DRM scheme to be sure that you will have to re-buy anything that you already have in ebook versions from anyone else! I'll stick with a device that supports as many Open formats as I can get, thus enabling me to shop around for the best content at the best prices! Right now use a Sony prs505 with Ubuntu linux and Calibre for a library organizer and ebook converter!
see subject
Hearst Corporation announce the development of a Kindle type gadget publishers can use to publish their last will and testament, their memoirs and their suicide notes.
Rupert Murdoch is first to place an advance order.
Posts, MyBio or Sig, may contain satire, sarcasm, bolded nouns be sardonic or even witty & be Church of SD
Think about how websites used to look in 1998.
Let's see. Small, fast, efficient, readable.
It's only because of professional webdesigners trying to maximize usability, time on site, ad clicks, and return on investment that we've moved to the sleek look of what is web 2.0
Where you too can download 600k of Javascript, flash, and animated GIFs to view a simple page of text that actually came up faster over my 33.6k modem than it does over my 256k DSL.
Here's my slightly offtopic rant for all you slashdotters that go on multi-paragraph tirades about personal pet peeves.
Woop dee doo. I don't deem my own message all that important so I could care less if my $ signs are distracting from the overall message.
It's the internet, man. Can't we just have a little fun with it?
Why was this moderated flamebait? The poster is exactly right; somebody needs to read about the history of copyright and the Stationer's Company.
Many (most) authors love their publishers for helping them get their ideas out of their head and to others (Marketing, finding artists, arranging book tours, not to mention proofing, improving etc)
Obviously the side of the publisher that we the customer sees is just a guy and a printing press, but i assure you, they do alot more than that.
Are you so sure? Alienating customers won't help publishers any, since they're where the money comes from.
Yeah, and cable TV, internet and mobile subscribers are where the money comes from, so obviously providers in those industries would never do anything to screw their customers. Business transactions, rational self interest, providing value and all that good stuff.
I worked in the book industry for 7 years that spanned the short-lived Rocket eBook generation of electronic books. I can assure you that the majority of publishers I worked with (my employer represented more than 100 independent publishers) would have laughed you out of the room with that "providing value" nonsense. Book publishers are no different than record or film companies, they just work on thinner margins taken from smaller revenues.
So here is why this might work: Skiff eliminates a middleman, namely Amazon. Thus consumers could end up paying less, while publishers (and even writers) get more.
What on earth makes you think that prices are based on the layers of middle-men (or any other cost)? Good grief!
If it is "by publishers for publishers", only people who will buy it are publishers themselves. E.g. Dan Brown's manager.
Is there a popular book about business management that suggest to target the largest marketshare owner?
First Palm claims they will kill iPhone, Verizon attacks directly AT&T/Apple and now this.
Such basic "rule of thumb" things do not work. You can't beat Amazon in anything online unless you change the way you think. Amazon would happily allow _your_ ads inside their pages. Do you have such vision? Amazon could let you use their own idle processing power for your services and can happily rent cheap bandwidth to you. That is the kind of a company you race with.
Will you sell any book about Citizen Kane in your store to begin with? How many years have your media empire boycotted Orson Wells because of his work? Start with answering it and apologizing him/his fans.
There is an amazingly multiplatform reader "wattpad", it has applications for every kind of platform you can imagine including J2ME.
The content looks like crap sometimes but you can see the incoming nightmare of big publishers. People can sit with a keyboard and write actual novel you know. This time, they can publish it electronically too. Just like Youtube.
"Have you been published?" "No but, I got like 3.000.000 readers who read my story. How many books have you sold?"
It is too early to talk about yet, the content is not mature yet but trust me, it is coming.
Meaning its another brick not worth having.
If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
The Skiff platform is not applicable...We have p2p web sites for that.
The unseen Skiff device may be enticing but smartdevices.com.cn SMARTQ7/SMARTQ5 Mobile Internet Devices allow you to read/create .pdf files. Can the skiff device allow you do create a .pdf file of your own? I would bet that it doesn't because Media Content Creator's focus is for its consumer to JUST CONSUME. www.hearst.com has a page mentioning their skiff services are "...all optimized for wireless delivery to dedicated e-readers..." which backs up my point. Hearst isn't interested in encouraging the "Do-it-yourself" revolution; Hearst is only interested in keeping their media content empire status quo. Good luck with that ;)
Amazon apparently makes small margins on their ebooks (and in some cases take a loss when a user makes a wireless purchase). The profits mostly go towards the publishers because Amazon wanted to sign up so many of them so quickly they didn't negotiate well. I think what publishers are realizing is that when it's time to negotiate future deals with Amazon that they will be in deep doo-doo. Gravy train is over for publishers, and they are scrambling to get back the deal by building a platform and infrastructure. Something that took Amazon and its competitors 3.5 years to build from the ground up.
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.