[FM Discuss] final TOC
Joshua Facemyer
jfacemyer at gmail.com
Wed Feb 25 20:11:21 PST 2009
One thing I wanted to add (but didn't think it was relevant enough,
though I do now) was that I believe people who are web-savvy enough to
find what they want on the web probably won't be lured into buying a
book about it except for a few specific reasons: they like having a
"handy" (in the real sense) reference; they like reading a paper book
(which is actually probably the majority of book readers; more relevant
for a reading type book as opposed to a reference type book); they want
a "souvenir".
Now, obviously that doesn't exhaust the list, but it makes the point
that most of these buyers won't likely expect a book update, and will be
happy with online updates.
I'm not sure I even understand what type of updates the editors are
talking about, in this regard (sorry for my ignorance :( ) - how in the
world do you provide an update to a paper book without doing it on the
web?! Or sending a pamphlet to all buyers when updates are made...!
The only way you can provide updates is online. If they don't want to
deal with non-updatable books, I dare say they shouldn't be selling
printed books... I don't mean to sound trite, just can't comprehend
that concept of mixing two seemingly unmixable publishing models.
Which brings me to another point I wanted to make and can do so
intelligently now: the models we're talking about are more authoring
models and not really publishing models. While you can mix authoring
models, I don't think the publishing models are that flexible. That's
why we have screen readers now - but it's less a mix of models and more
of a new model, in my opinion.
JF
Andy Oram wrote:
> I do find that argument a good one. Thanks. I believe the reason some editors at computer publications are talking about providing updates is purely for competitive reasons. We know that people are saying, "I won't buy a print book because the information will be out of date; I'll just get it online" and we feel we can provide a better product than what comes up in a web search, but we need also to compete on the basis of staying current.
>
> Andy
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Joshua Facemyer <jfacemyer at gmail.com>
> To: discuss at lists.flossmanuals.net
> Sent: Wed, 25 Feb 2009 13:28:18 -0500 (EST)
> Subject: Re: [FM Discuss] final TOC
>
>
>
> Andy Oram wrote:
>
>> Thanks, those are good ideas. The reason people who buy a book should get updates is that the normal book-for-sale model is a closed one. The book is not freely downloadable. So a publisher can't ask someone to just go online for updates. To have the whole book online is a different model--and we do that with some books under a CC license.
>>
>>
> But I think you've made my point by distinguishing between the two
> models. If you're offering a book online as well as a printed version,
> you're working with two different models - there's no way, really, to
> avoid it.
>
> People who view a book online only expect what is told to them about
> updates - if I offer a book and say it will be updated, they'll want
> updates. If I just offer a text and say nothing about updates, nobody
> can rightfully want updates.
>
> This is even more true for a printed book, to the extent that most
> people who buy printed books likely assume that they've gotten
> everything they've paid for - unless you explicitly indicate that they
> will be provided updates.
>
> I don't believe this would be a problem, if you wanted to tell them that
> they can get updates online. But it would be a problem if they were
> expecting online updates as part of their purchase, and you provided none.
>
> Anyway, I think it's best to keep the distribution models separate
> (really, I don't think there's a choice). If you want to bridge the
> gap, you'd start to consider selling e-books, which theoretically could
> allow providing the customer updates easily to his purchased product.
>
> Anyway, I really think that anyone purchasing a printed book would be
> absolutely out of his mind to expect any sort of update unless one were
> at least strongly implied in the product description. There is no such
> implication contained in a printed book that derives from an online
> book. And, seeing as this would only be expected in certain types of
> publishing (maybe medical or academic where that may be standard in some
> instances), I wouldn't foresee any problems with keeping the standard
> models.
>
> JF
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