November 26, 2015
by Jandré
1 Comment

Is Unlimited Subscription Limited?

As a child it was my ambition to visit an “Eat as much as you can”-restaurant. It sounded like an offer that would suit my particular skill set extremely well. When I, finally, had the opportunity to go and fill up, it left me feeling bloated and strangely unsatisfied.

The expression “too much of a good thing” was coined by the Bard and makes its original appearance in As You Like It. These days it is used to indicate excess. (Look here for the NSFW original meaning.) When it comes to eating, it is both the possibility of excess that entices and disappoints these “as much as you can” experiences. At InstaScribe, we are wondering if it is the same with reading.

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The unlimited pearls Oyster will disappear when it snaps shut during January 2016. (Oyster has been bought out by Google, so there is a good chance that the service will return once Google has reformatted it to their liking.) Scribd has also been adding limits to their unlimited offer. Romance and Erotica readers will get no more love from Scribd. Even Amazon’s Kindle Unlimited has come under some criticism.

 

Short History

Oyster, Scribd and Kindle Unlimited are a few of the read “as much as you can” services that have been popping up over the past few years. To make things really simple, for a flat rate, generally in the order of about $9, you could read as much as you could read.

There are some limits and limitations. The biggest perhaps that generally best sellers did not make it onto these services. Why, you might ask?. “It is about money!” would be Zen Scribe’s answer. Let’s leave that there for now.

Even so, these services offered between 500,000 and 1,000,000 books at that flat rate. At Instascribe we know of no person who could exhaust these vast offerings. Even at one book per hour 24 hours per day it would take 41 667 days or just more that 114 years to read a million books!

It does look great at first glance. I can read and read and read, leaving me just enough time to work, eat, and sleep. Surely not too much of a good thing!

The Reality

Yet, as we mentioned in the introduction, Oyster is ending their unlimited subscription option and Scribd is scaling down.

Justo Hidalgo, the CEO of a lesser known European subscription service, 24 Symbols, argues that consumers, or readers are more interested in access than ownership. This implies that these kinds of services should be a great hit.

Then why do we read about closing down and scaling down? We have to remember that these services are business and not Non-Profit organizations. They are not volunteer agencies. They are in it for the money. And you have to be at least a very big hypocrite if you want to criticize someone for making money in a legal and honorable way from which you can profit!

In the case of Scribd, the company was surprised by the voraciousness of Romance readers. You see, Scribd (and Oyster) offers a full pay out to the author if a certain percentage of the book is read.

This means that the author does not get paid once a book is downloaded, but when a certain percentage of the book is read. In the case of Scribd it is 10%.

Now, granted, most of the books offered here are very cheap to begin with, but even at $0.99 one has to read “only” eleven books per month before you are getting more than you paid for. And some books are perhaps as much as $3.99.

This is where the problem comes in. Readers are reading more than they are paying for. You can not blame them for that, because that is, in effect, what they are paying for! (You are paying to read more than you paid to read!)

This means that Scribd and Oyster lose money if you read too much. And, there is no business in the world that can be successful by spending more than they are earning. (Governments, however, seem to measure success in this way!)

KU is different

Kindle Unlimited employs a complicated formula to determine how much the author gets paid per book. The current author is paid (approximately) a whopping half cent per page!

Granted that a lot of the books they offer might not be considered for the Nobel Prize for Literature, or a “mere” Booker prize, this is not fair remuneration. Reward does not reflect effort, not even closely.

Conclusion

So we have two completely different problems facing the current unlimited subscription services. One, readers are reading more than expected, thus dipping into the companies profits. And, the KU model completely undervalues the authors, while, admittedly, keeping the readers happy.

IF Oyster and Scribd like services up their subscription rates, to balance things out, they will end up with less subscribers. I suspect that they haven’t up the percentage that should be read before paying out, because data shows that readers are finishing the books.

Amazon has already come under fire for strong arming authors and publishers alike, but they are still making money hand over fist.

We have two inadequate business models. In the first the retailer suffers because they have to give away the products they have paid for. And in the second the creator is being under-paid.

What is the solution? We do not know. But at Instascribe we would love to see a system that values the effort of the author, while benefiting the reader. Authors and readers are not enemies, but friends.

November 25, 2015
by InstaScribe
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Quotes Wednesday

Gods always come in handy, they justify almost anything.

By InstaScribe

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November 24, 2015
by punjacked
1 Comment

Readers Can’t Digest – Week 63 (16-Nov to 22-Nov)

1. Emoji named Oxford Dictionaries’ ‘Word of the Year’

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2. Taylor Swift donates 25,000 books to New York Schools

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3. Winnie-the-Pooh sequel details revealed

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4. Morrissey and Jong nominated for Bad Sex awards

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5. Harry Potter audiobooks now available from Audible

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November 23, 2015
by Neelima
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Homo Sapiens and Sci-fi epics @ Talking Terrace Book Club in October 2015 (Part 3)

Priya Iyer, a biologist, had come down to this session of the Talking Terrace Book Club. (Read Parts 1 and 2)

Priya and I both got talking about Homo Sapiens for some reason. I was reading(and am still reading) a book called Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Hariri. This book is essential reading if you are a Homo Sapien; Sapiens haven’t been very nice to their fellow species. Probably genocide resulted in the extinction of other species like the Neanderthals. The history of the human race has been the history of extinction of a large number of species-plants and animals. Hariri takes us on a fascinating journey and his breadth of knowledge and ability to connect the dots makes the reader hungry for more.

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Priya talked about several books.

A Short History of Progress  was one, based on a series of talks by Ronald Wright. This book tells the tale of human hubris from the time of the Neanderthals right up to US foreign policy. Wright is in a provocative mood and wants to burst the bubble of the human 10,000 year old  human experiment. He calls the idea of progress a myth.

Priya found India after Gandhi by Ramachandra Guha to be an impressive read  as it tells the tale of how India was constructed post independence and how idealism ruled that period and created a different brand India.

Being a biologist herself, Priya found the book Beautiful Minds: The Parallel lives of Great Apes and Dolphins by Maddelina Biarzi riveting. Which is why book clubs like these are exciting. You get to hear about books you would have otherwise not imagined to have been written. Primates and Cetaceans have had no common ancestor in a hundred million years and yet there are remarkable similarities in the way they interact with others of their own species.

Her eclectic reading tastes covered the exciting Kim by Kipling, the strangeness of Murakami and Amruta Patil’s graphic novel. The icing on the cake, however, was when she began to talk about a new version of the epic Ramayana, this one written by Joan Roughgarden.  Ram-2050: A Ramayan Epic for the Future is a sci-fi version of the epic. The best part is that I had read it as part of a book review opportunity and so the usual coincidences that occur in a book club or BYOB party recurred again as though to prove my point. It’s a book big on ideas and Priya expected nothing less from her PhD guide, Roughgarden, who has also authored the book. The story is about a genetically engineered Ram and what drove Roughgarden to write it was how this epic was probably the only one she could find where animals and humans cooperate in such close quarters. It’s a rendition that makes you think.

What have you been reading?

November 20, 2015
by InstaScribe
1 Comment

Visual Friday: What are Writers Thankful for?

What are Writers Thankful for?

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November 19, 2015
by Neelima
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Prime Numbers and Start ups @ Talking Terrace Book Club in October 2015 (Part 2)

Abhaya had a long reading list.

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There was his favorite author Mannu Bhandari’s  Hindi book Bina Deewaron ke Ghar, a story about the quintessentially jealous husband who encouraged his wife but is in a quandary once his wife is successful.

Krishna Sobti’s Mitro Marjani  is another Hindi book that Abhaya enjoyed. The language is lively and filled with enjoyable Punjabi phrases which add to the provative story of an aggressive female protagonist. The story deconstructs the idea of how a woman in a so-called respectable family should be.

It was mathematics, however, that stole the session. The Music of the Primes: Searching to Solve the Greatest Mystery in Mathematics by Marcus du Sautoy  is a book suitable for most readers, though Abhaya would have prefered to savor the equations themselves, rather than the explanations. The book gives a history of Euler right up to Riemann’s hypothesis.

Another in depth historical account is An Imaginary Tale: The Story of the Square Root of Minus One by Paul J.Nahin. The story is about i in mathematical parlance- the earliest encounters of i and how various mathematicians dealt with it, some ignoring it, some using it cautiously while remaining perplexed and others boldly going where no one had gone before. It was a struggle of hundreds of years after which mathematicians were comfortable enough with the idea to start using it like any other tool.

Another brilliant book on mathematics that Abhaya spoke about and some of us could relate to was A Mathematician’s Lament by Paul Lockhart. Mathematics should be taught for intellectual pleasure instead of the disconnected method of techniques and notations devoid of any context. This 35 page treatise explains how education is destroying mathematics. It should be fun rather than an impossible problem.

Another book he read was Zero to One: Notes on Start Ups, or How to Build the Future by Peter Thiel, founder of Paypal. The book is based on a series of lectures the author gave in a course at Stanford.  It doesn’t help you start a start up but makes a strong case for starting one. Abhaya wouldn’t called it a ground breaking book, in spite of the recommendations on the blurb from Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk and Nassim Nicholas Taleb.

Have you read Part 1 of the Talking Terrace Book Club yet?

November 18, 2015
by InstaScribe
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Quotes Wednesday

It's a fine world, though rich in hardships at times.

By InstaScribe

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November 17, 2015
by punjacked
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Readers Can’t Digest – Week 62 (09-Nov to 15-Nov)

1. Gwyneth Paltrow launches lifestyle imprint Goop

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2. Barnes and Noble is now selling vinyl records

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3. New French Vending Machines Dispense Free Short Stories

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4. Google Play Books Receives Comic Friendly Update

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5. Kate Hudson wellness book to HarperCollins

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November 16, 2015
by Neelima
0 comments

Immortals and Bankers @ Talking Terrace Book Club in October 2015 (Part 1)

Books from multiple genres were discussed in the first session of the Talking Terrace Book Club in October.

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While reading John Keay’s To Cherish and Conserve and India Discovered, Jaya discovered how history was something that was created. People don’t know history by default; it isn’t  a scientific law that can be observed and measured.  What happened was curious folks from the East India Company took it on themselves to decipher puzzles such as Ashoka’s Brahmi Script. It was the Asiatic Society of Bengal that played a huge role in making sense of the pieces of this puzzle. In India dates were not recorded as there was a greater tradition of orality. So we really do not know what happened—history is possibly curation and extremely tenuous.
Which bought Jaya to the bestseller fiction called Immortals of Meluha by Amish Tripathi. While some people in the group enjoyed the fantasy, some thought it smacked of pseudo-history and lacked the literary flair as well. The question then was what are the requisites of a bestseller in India. A connection to past glory- real or imagined- seems to be one necessity.

Another book Jaya read was a romance called  Those Pricey Thakur Girls by Anuja Chauhan. “Would make for a good movie adaptation, though I am hard up to rate the romance genre. It never quite matches up.”

Again Atwood failed to impress Jaya. “I think Margaret Atwood’s The Blind Assassin is overrated. The protagonist lacks spine and somehow the suspense feels forced. The only interesting character dies early on. However, if you want to learn more about how the elite live in Canada, this book is for you.”

Srishti read Sidney Sheldon’s A Stranger in the Mirror. “It’s one of those Sidney Sheldons that actually gets better towards the end,” she said. This is perhaps one of Sheldon’s finest books, a departure from his usual thriller formula.

When Anil spoke about Ravi Subranium’s book  The Bankster, Priya Iyer, a biologist who joined our team for the Talking Terrace Book Club,  wanted to know if there were any books about financial crimes.  Anil found The Bankster unputdownable, little wonder that Ravi Subramanium is called the John Grisham of India. However, the book is more on the lines of a suspense thriller. The idea of a financial crime being woven into fiction is appealing, but not a part of commercial fiction in India yet.

Have you read any such books?

November 13, 2015
by InstaScribe
0 comments

Visual Friday – Feminism in Books: A History

Feminism in Books: A History

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