Difference between revisions of "E-Ink leaves its mark"

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===Industry changes===
===Industry changes===
'''The power of Google'''
'''The power of Google'''
// to be continued


'''Open-source books'''
'''Open-source books'''
// to be continued


===Consequences===
===Consequences===

Revision as of 00:58, 21 May 2009

Driving forces towards this scenario:
- Amount of CO2 it costs to print a book
- Too many trees are being cut
- Google soon had every single book digitized which was free to download
- Copyright laws were changed to counter this but damage was already done
- Oil supplies depleted, availablity of ink went down
- Population is getting more and more tech-savy and learns how to use ebooks
- Open-source books are more widely available
- Multi-cultural society becomes even larger, most countries have various languages spoken, ebooks are in all languages available
- Air traffic has come to an halt because of no more oil and distribution has become very slow and difficult

The scenario

Introduction

The “E-Ink leaves its mark”-scenario focuses on the rise of ebooks and ebook-readers and the downfall of the traditional paper books. The major advantages ebooks bring with them will make them a success in almost every possible part of the book-market as we know it, leaving paper books to a mere niche market of collectors and nostalgists.

Advantages of ebooks and current ebook-readers (current & short-term view)

Kindle-like devices will flood the market in the near-future, each bringing new features and slight advantages over the previous generation. Main focus of the new devices will be the weight, thickness, battery-life and screen technology. The new features on the devices will include mp3-playback capability, web-browsers.

With the new products, new standards will follow and various companies will choose various file-standards. As the readers are often capable of using multiple file-formats there will be no apparent winner.

Alongside the different products will come different stores and sales-models where users will be able to buy their books, but also can subscribe to magazines, newspapers, blogs, etc. which will automatically download to their devices as they become available. Also, using these stores, authors will be able to sell their books without intervention of a publisher. They will often share in the revenue of the sales of their books or get paid through a comparable system.

Users will embrace the ebook stores for being available anyplace, anytime, and for offering an enormous amount of books at competitive prices. Many classic books are available for free, as they are in the public domain, and with the gutenberg project and other alternatives, this collection will only grow.

Students as early adopters (short & medium-term view)

As ebook-readers evolve and more books are being published in ebook format, more people will switch from paper books to ebooks and ‘brick and mortar’-stores will struggle to survive in a market of declining sales after already having lost a lot of market share to the online stores.

A major step in the adoption of ebooks are students. Universities will start programs where students will be able to buy ebook-readers and be able to buy all necessary study books through an online store. As this can be done for large groups of students at the same time, the students will be able to buy the reader and books at low prices. With the advantages of easy bookmarking, searching through text quickly and jumping to pages directly from the index, the ebooks will bring nice advantages to the students.

Universities will also start to set up systems for the students through which they can obtain study material like presentations and papers of presenters directly on the reader, making it an all-in-one device for looking up all sorts of information.

Students will get fully used to using the devices, lowering the threshold for them to buy non-study books in online stores and using the device for more than just studying. All while being at university, they will hardly touched any paper books as all the necessary study material is available on the reader and they will even read their regular books on the device.

As more students will graduate having used the ebook readers for longer periods of time, they are more likely to keep using similar devices and give up on paper books as a whole.

With the introduction of the aforementioned programs by universities the paper study book market will essentially disappear. As more students graduate and switch to ebook readers the market for regular paper books will also start to notice the effects and start losing market share to the ebook market.

As a side-effect to all this, another market of books is also influenced. With increasing technology, text-to-speech technology will also evolve and ebooks can be ‘read’ to the listener by the ebook reader, virtually destroying the market for audiobooks, as each ebook will be an audiobook by default.

Ebook-readers evolve (long-term view)

With technology evolving at the same pace as it has in the last couple of years, ebook readers will become thinner and lighter than ever before. Flexible displays will become the new standard and battery times will be measured in weeks instead of hours or days. The new ebook reader will look like a thick piece of paper, which can be rolled up to a small package with a small block of plastic for the necessary connectors and electronics. Controls will go through motion and the touch-sensitive surface.

With the extremely small size and high battery life, everybody will be able to take along their entire book collection in their pockets. With the high refresh rates and color screens, the ebook reader will be able to display full color websites and pictures and even play some movie-material.

Along with the new technology, comes lower prices. With different types of products with varying features to accommodate all wishes of different users, everybody will be able to buy an ebook-reader that suits him or her best at an affordable price.

Now that the ebook readers have become common good and virtually every disadvantage has been overcome through new technologies, there is nothing to hold back the ebooks from becoming the biggest player in the market. The paper book market can now be considered as a niche market, as paper books will mostly be bought by nostalgists and collectors.

DRM & Piracy (possible issues to overcome)

DRM on ebooks will be common good for the first couple of years. As the ebook readers evolve and different online stores come and go, different file formats will appear and disappear, each having their own DRM protection. With people switching devices and shops after a certain amount of time, the call for DRM-less ebooks will grow louder. Authors will be reluctant to make this move at first, but quickly come to the conclusion that removing DRM doesn’t only have downsides. Piracy on ebooks will always exist, and with the popularity of ebooks increasing, so will piracy on ebooks. Removing DRM will make it easier to copy and spread ebooks, but those ebooks would eventually be spread anyways.

With piracy growing, more people will be able to come in contact with the books of certain authors which they previously would not have found or stayed away from as they didn’t want to spend money on books from an author they didn’t know. These changes will lead to a similar evolvement as with music where artists gradually came to see that DRM was not the solution and eventually gave up on it.

Background Information:

This scenario is based on the influence of the following factors:

Global warming

One of the most important factors that will lead to this scenario is the environment. The environment is of big importance as it represents the supplier of most resources needed for a paper book to be printed. Global warming is a current problem that affects the environment and will have a major impact on our society.

Trees

By year 2020 the carbon dioxide in the environment has increased with be 15% comparing to year 2008. Those 15% increase have been responsible of the death of 10% of the worldwide trees in the past 10 years. Moreover, the global warming had increased the number and the intensity of forest fires so much that the fire fighters are not able anymore to extinguish them. Forests have become smaller and smaller which determined the governments to apply laws against logging. The trees planted to save the situation had no major effect as the number of trees that die early is much bigger than those planted.

As trees are needed to support life, their purpose as wood supply for printing books has decreased in the favor of e-books.

Water

The global warming raised another issue: the water resources. For years countries have recycled waisted water but now the problem has become so serious that the water is supplied to people based on a schedule. Due to some innovations in the washing (dishes, clothing) industry, the water waist has been reduced, but as the global warming is generating lack and rivers to dry, the water is being provided only as a source for drinks and food.

The books industry was forced to find new ways of providing books to their customers, ways that did not involve the use of water, and eventually they reoriented to e-books.

Oil becomes scarce

Transportation

Because books are printed in one country and sold all over the world, they have to be transported. The transportation costs are constantly increasing due to the oil resource level. As it is estimated that the oil will disappear by 2050, the costs of transportation will only increase until a new technology will replace it.

So far small oil-based cars have been partly replaced by electrical ones. But books are not transported by cars. The most important way of transportation is by airplane which uses oil as fuel and it’s not plausible to say that in the next 10 years plains will be electricity-based. Of course there is the ship-transportation option, but people want a new book in a few hours-days and ships need way more time than that. How many companies are willing to take the risk of not satisfying the customer?

Ink availability

// to be continued

Printing industry side-effects

Number of trees cut

//to be continued

Level of C02 generated to print a book

//to be continued

Social changes

Population becomes more tech-savy

// to be continued

E-books are available in all languages

// to be continued

Industry changes

The power of Google

// to be continued

Open-source books

// to be continued

Consequences

E-ink

Electronic paper

Educational needs

Environmental awareness

Digital portable devices

Conclusion

With technology evolving quickly, virtually all possible disadvantages that ebook readers currently have versus paper books will disappear in the years to come. Ebooks will take over the book market by types of books, starting with study books and gradually taking over the regular book market, taking along the audiobooks as it goes. The issue of DRM will take some time and effort to overcome, but will never seriously hold back the evolution of ebooks and ebook readers.