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News from JURN

Category Archives: Official and think-tank reports

The value of free

28 Thursday Oct 2010

Posted by futurilla in Official and think-tank reports

≈ Leave a comment

We occasionally hear hard statistics about the wider economic value of open access in academia. So it’s interesting that the new report The Connected Kingdom: how the Internet is transforming the UK economy (PDF link) has an estimate of the value of “free” to online consumers…

“We conservatively estimate the consumer surplus for free online content to be about £5 billion annually, or twice what consumers pay to access the Internet.”

I’d suspect that “conservatively” is report-speak for “we didn’t count piracy”?

Scholarly Publishing through Open Access: A Bibliography

10 Sunday Oct 2010

Posted by futurilla in Economics of Open Access, How to improve academic search, Official and think-tank reports, Open Access publishing

≈ Leave a comment

A comprehensive new 2010 bibliography, Transforming Scholarly Publishing through Open Access: A Bibliography.

“…has over 1,100 references, provides in-depth coverage of published journal articles, books, and other works about the open access movement. Many references have links to freely available copies of included works.”

E-Journal Archiving For UK HE Libraries

09 Saturday Oct 2010

Posted by futurilla in Official and think-tank reports

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JISC is seeking consultation comments on E-Journal Archiving For UK HE Libraries: A Draft White Paper.

Kindle vs. iPad, the statistics from Nielsen

29 Wednesday Sep 2010

Posted by futurilla in Official and think-tank reports, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

Lots of interesting new statistics and graphs about iPad and Kindle 3 users, over at Nielsen.

Broadly, Kindle owners are older, affluent, and educated — while iPad owners are younger, 65% are male, and they have less education and are more susceptible to advertising. Typical Apple fan-boys, by the sound of it. I wonder if very many iPad users are regularly using it as an ebook reader? Not many, I’d guess — tiring backlit screen, heavy to hold, hot, short battery life, etc. iBooks sales are dire for contemporary fiction, apparently. I’d guess the iPad is skewing to a younger demographic because it’s more useful for “rich media” consumption on the move (I’ve actually heard it called the PornPad, in jest, although only once).

I’m currently formatting my books for the Kindle 3 and the Amazon store, now that they’ve finally opened a UK version, so I’m interested in the demographics and who’s actually buying. No doubt Amazon has the statistics, but it’s not telling. There are hints that they might be looking to sell 50-60 million ebooks in 2010 as a whole. So it’s useful to hear some basic facts from Nielsen, such as…

“Forty-four percent of [Kindle users] make more than $80,000/year” […] “27% having Master’s degrees or doctorates” […] “47% of Kindle owners [are under the age of 35]”

I guess we could always crowdsource some author sales, since the indie sellers must know how much they’re selling? Joe Konrath has recently breached the wall of secrecy, for instance…

“Konrath has just passed the 100,000 eBooks sold mark, and he has shared his numbers as to on which platforms the books were sold. To put the most important number up first, Konrath sold 78,412 of the 100,000 eBooks on Kindle.”

In the next few months, if Amazon can ship enough Kindle 3s into the key UK market to meet the pre-Christmas demand (I predict the Kindle being the No.1 most-wanted adult Xmas prezzie), then according to quotes in The Bookseller we’re about to see a…

“game-changing autumn” for the UK high street, with the possibility that “this autumn is going to be carnage”.

Now high street bookshops lost me many years ago to Amazon, Amazon used, Addall used, Google Books, and audio books — they’re completely irrelevant to me — but if the predictions are correct then I won’t take pleasure in seeing a national bookshop chain shuttered by next Spring.

National markets will no doubt become more important for ebooks, since Amazon is locking UK customers out of its U.S. Kindle store, and allowing sellers to set per-territory prices. I’m used to buying used print books from the USA, often cheaper even when the cost of Air Mail is added. That’s one of the “lock-in” factors that I don’t like about the Kindle. On the other hand, the ease of publishing straight onto Amazon and the 70% royalties are amazing (even though various factors mean it’s not actually 70% in the end).

Looking out to the 18-month horizon, Quercus recently reported that their ebook sales currently bring in “less than 2% of group revenue”, but the head of Quercus is quoted as saying that…

“I would be surprised if e-books weren’t 7.5% to 10% [of their revenue] in 18 months”.

And don’t think that piracy won’t be a factor. Oxford University Press recently had a huge leak of their PDF books onto Demonoid, for instance. We may even see the Kindle DRM being cracked on a rolling basis.

Lastly, I see that Amazon has launched Kindle for the Web into beta status. Basically, embed a sample of a book into your blog, just like YouTube. Nice. And get a slice of referral commission if someone buys the full version. Not a bad idea, given that the Kindle screen is about the same as a wide blog column.

ROI Research report on search-engine user behaviour

28 Tuesday Sep 2010

Posted by futurilla in JURN's Google watch, Official and think-tank reports

≈ Leave a comment

A summary of the Summer 2010 ROI Research survey of 500 search-engine users, just released…

“19% abandon the online search, taking it offline if they can’t find the information”

Arts and humanities impacts

11 Friday Jun 2010

Posted by futurilla in Official and think-tank reports, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

A new report, Assessing the impact of arts and humanities research at the University of Cambridge makes a rare stab at trying to develop a framework for the wider impact of arts & humanities research.

Findability and wastage

08 Tuesday Jun 2010

Posted by futurilla in Official and think-tank reports, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

A new Network World article on findability. Professionals, it is said,…

“spend 20% of their time looking for information and they find what they are looking for less than half of the time. That’s equivalent to spending 10 weeks a year searching for information and remaining ignorant half of that time.”

And that’s presumably with the expensive knowledge management tools ordered by the consultants.

“Ah paper, I remember paper…”

26 Tuesday Jan 2010

Posted by futurilla in Official and think-tank reports, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

An interesting report from official UK government researchers YouGov, The Costs of Traditional Filing (PDF link). Small and medium businesses in the UK together…

“waste an estimated £42 million each day locating paper documents. … [staff in an average firm] spend approx. 3 months a year looking for documents […] 87% of respondents spend up to 2 hours every day looking for documents”

Add to that the time untrained staff waste looking for things online, and there’s some serious business wastage going on. And I’d suspect that matters are the same in much of the public sector.

Studies on access: a review

23 Wednesday Dec 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, Official and think-tank reports, Spotted in the news

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“Studies on access: a review” by Philip M. Davis (20th Dec 2009) is a… “review of the empirical literature on access to scholarly information. This review focuses on surveys of authors, article download and citation analysis”. From the conclusion…

“There is a dearth of research on whether free access to the scientific literature is making a difference in non-research contexts, such as in teaching, medical practice, industry and government policy making.”

   [ Hat-tip: Open Access News ]

Overcoming barriers: access to research information

09 Wednesday Dec 2009

Posted by futurilla in How to improve academic search, Official and think-tank reports

≈ Leave a comment

Two new December 2009 reports from the UK’s prolific RIN, part of a cluster of five such reports…

1) Overcoming barriers: access to research information (PDF link)…

“This report finds that many researchers are encountering difficulties in getting access to the content they need and that this is having a significant impact on their research.”

“technical limitations such as log in/authentication problems (26%) or problems with proxy servers and off-site access (a particular problem for researchers [seeking to access ejournals] – a majority in the humanities and social sciences – who spend significant amounts of time away from their home institution)”

“The proportions of those who felt the impact [of unavailable ejournal content] as having a ‘significant’ impact on their research were higher in the arts and humanities“

2) How researchers secure access to licensed content not immediately available to them (DOC link, Word)…

“emailing the author directly […] creative searching online, primarily using Google Books and Google Scholar […] accessing cached content; and signing up for free trials with publishers […] buying books online, usually second-hand, when they are unable to get access via other routes.”

   [ Hat-tip: Open Access News ]

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