Open Letter to Flipkart - Doing eBooks Better Than Amazon
- There are reasons for everything you think Amazon is doing wrong. Mostly they boil down to "having to deal with entrenched old media companies who are married to the physical medium". - Amazon's terrible prices on ebooks is due to them not having crazy deals with the publishers like Apple negotiated ith music publishers when they set up iTunes. People selling their books directly, without the infrastructure and tradition of a publisher, can and do set their prices a lot lower: http://blog.nathanbransford.com/2011/03/amanda-hocking-and-9... - Same with the cut-n-paste. Publishers demanded the capability to limit that, and set how much you can do when they build the files. - (And as to gifting books? Well, if you're reading books on your iPad using a putative Flipkart reader, that may be out - the Kindle app on the iDevices has had its store functionality neutered because Apple doesn't want any in-app purchases they don't get a cut of.) - Flipkart, if they add books, will be bound by whatever deals it might make with publishers, the same as Amazon is. Maybe they'll do better when they negotiate with local India-only publishers. But I doubt they'll do better with the transnationals. - Also: > ebooks that sell well, can then be printed for guaranteed sales. - What? I know I sure don't want a physical copy of anything I bought as an ebook. I don't need more physical books in my life. Especially not copies of entertainment fiction. 
- I have been inclined towards the paperback as it offers me far more value. There is no improvement to my experience that might make me switch my method of reading. - I disagree with this. e-Books offer a superior reading experience in almost every way except "if you fall asleep while reading and the book falls, you don't break your nose or damage your book" (which regrettably has almost happened to me on several occasions). - There have been several books that I willingly paid a higher price for on the Kindle as opposed to getting the paperback at a book store. - The convenience of having all your books on a single slim device (or synced between two) and not taking up physical space in your house is great enough for me to pay an extra Rs100 or so. - That said, I agree with the point on the whole - most people don't think like I do and will expect the ebook to be cheaper and will feel completely ripped off if it's not. 
- I would love to get the opinion of the HN community on this. Can Flipkart beat Amazon?