Tuesday, 23 July 2013
Poll Shows That 75% Prefer Printed Books To eBooks
<b>http://tinyurl.com/8cyqgjn - <a href='http://tinyurl.com/8cyqgjn'>Textbook publishers revamp ebooks to fight used market</a></b><p>By Stephanie Simon and Madeline Will (Reuters) - A booming market in recent years for selling and renting used college textbooks has saved students across the United States a ton of cash. But it has put textbook publishers in a bind. They don't make a cent unless students buy their books new. So increasingly, publishers like Pearson Plc and McGraw-Hill Education are turning to a new model ...</p><B>Self</b><p>-"It enables all the losers who can't find a publisher to put out their rejected work as an ebook. Only joking." "I learned a hell of a lot in the three days," ... "Stephen King probably sells a thousand books a minute," I said. "Apparently the vast ...</p><B>Poll Shows That 75% Prefer Printed Books To eBooks</b><p>Attila Dimedici writes "In a new Rasmussen poll, 75% of American adults would rather read a book in traditional print format than in an ebook format. Only 15% prefer the ebook format (the other 10% are undecided). The latter is a drop from the 23% that preferred the ebook format in Rasmussen's 2011 poll. In addition, more say they buy their books from a brick and mortar store than say they buy ...</p>
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