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Book Wars. John B. ThompsonЧитать онлайн книгу.

Book Wars - John B. Thompson


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the rotating objects on the page and how to combine the objects with the text and labels. They also needed to persuade Apple that what they were producing was something new, not just a static piece of text on a screen. They knew that one of the questions that would be asked about the iPad was: how does this compare with the Kindle? If the iPad was thought of as an ebook reader, then it wouldn’t compare very favourably: it would have a battery life measured in hours rather than weeks, you couldn’t read in sunlight and it would cost a lot more. If your definition of ebooks is static pieces of text that you read on a screen, then the Kindle is going to be a better ebook reader than the iPad. So their pitch to Apple was to seize this opportunity to think differently about what an ebook is. ‘Suppose you change the conversation about what the future of ebooks is – that’s a conversation you can win’, they said. ‘Suppose you can convince people that, sure, the Kindle has a million books, but who cares – they’re a million old books. Look at this amazing thing – this is what ebooks are going to be. And there are half a dozen reasons why it can’t run on a Kindle – the screen is crap, the processor is nothing like what it needs to be, there’s not enough memory and so on. There’s lots of reasons why the future of ebooks cannot exist on a Kindle. Never mind the present, look at the shining future.’ Apple was convinced. The Elements was finished on time and the app was one of a couple of dozen apps that were installed on the small batch of embargoed iPads that were sent out to journalists a few days before the public launch of the iPad. The response from reviewers was euphoric. Stephen Fry tweeted ‘Best App of all … Everything is animated and gorgeous. Alone worth iPad.’

      The publicity was exceptional and the app took off – they sold 3,600 copies on the first day, priced at $13.99 and £9.99. It went on to sell over a million copies and came out in fourteen different versions, including Japanese, French and German, generating over $3 million in net revenue. Theo had actually published a book called The Elements in September 2009 with Black Dog & Leventhal, a small New York trade house. It had been translated into several languages and had sold about 70,000 copies in all languages before the app came out. When the app was released, sales of the print book went through the roof. By 2012, more than 580,000 copies of the print edition had been sold in all languages. It was a stunning success, both as an app and as a book.

      A key part of this was to see that the software engineer must be on the same level as the other parties involved in developing the app: ‘You don’t bring an engineer in once you’ve decided what you’re going to do: the engineer is part of the process of deciding what you do.’ The senior management team included an engineer, John Cromie, who joined the team in 2010 to help build The Elements in sixty days and became the CTO; John managed the technical team and was part of all the key decisions about which new projects to take on. Once the management team had decided to embark on a new project, the planning and development of the book-as-app took place in development meetings at which the CTO and some of the programmers were present. There was a large screen on the wall and the engineers around the table plugged in their laptops so they could manipulate images and text on the screen as they talked about what to do. Sample pages were displayed, options were explored, technical limitations were discussed, costs were considered, decisions about what can and cannot be done were taken. This was a creative process in which the technical input of software engineers was factored in as the book was being written, shaping the way that the text was developed and how it was combined with the visual and audio elements of the app.


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