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Perdido Street Station and Thunderer

First I read Perdido Street Station by China Mieville, then more recently I read Thunderer by Felix Gilman. The similarities between them are numerous. Updated to review The Scar as well.

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Posted 22 Jun 2011 16:27 by tedu Updated: 08 Apr 2013 03:24
Tagged: bookreview

going paperless the hard way

A while back, I read about filling dumpsters and going paperless with some interest, but it didn’t move me to action because I don’t really have that much paperwork. Then came another DIY approach, something worthy of turning into a project.

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Posted 20 Jun 2011 03:43 by tedu Updated: 29 Nov 2014 02:51
Tagged: paperless project

thoughts on ebook pricing

First off, if you’re going to read this post, you have to subscribe to the economic belief that an appropriate price for a transaction is any price where both parties leave happy. If you instead believe that the appropriate price is cost of production plus a mixed 10-20% margin, you can leave now. This post is also somewhat constrained by my personal reading practices and habits.

When I buy a book, I’m purchasing it for the information contained on its pages, not the paper the pages are made of. Specifically, in the case of a novel, I’m buying the experience of reading the story. Therefore, I’m indifferent to the medium by which the experience is delivered, provided I enjoy it similarly.

I think more people believe this than realize it. Consider you’re offered two books, one that you’re interested in reading and one that you aren’t. The prices are the same. Clearly, you aren’t going to make your purchasing decision based on how much paper you’re getting for your money.

Physical books actually have a negative experience value (for me). I have to store the books. I have to move them, carry them, care for them, try not to lose them. ebooks do not share these shortcomings. Books do have their advantages, such as resale value, but in practice I almost never sell or lend books. In my situation, there are no benefits to books printed on paper.

Basically, if a paperback costs $6 and the ebook costs $7, I look at it as paying $6 for the story and $1 for the convenience of never needing to deal with the reality of a physical book. There is a limit here, of course. That convenience factor is probably not worth much more than about $2, and I very rarely buy any story for more than about $10 regardless of medium.

Posted 20 Jun 2011 02:45 by tedu Updated: 20 Jun 2011 02:45
Tagged: business thoughts

introducing flak

I am writing a new blog platform using my Lua webframework, triplex. It promises to do everything I want it to do, and probably very little else. For me, by me. It’s called flak, a cool sounding four letter word that’s not quite like blog, but not entirely different. The name also suggests what I think blogging is frequently like.

I’ll probably copy some content from the old blog, but most of it can and will be forgotten.

Posted 19 Jun 2011 16:32 by tedu Updated: 01 Sep 2012 23:51
Tagged: flak