I tried audio books on Google play and was positively surprised. Great UX ... I can cast to my Chromecast audio, I can add a shortcut to resume my book with one click on my phone. It integrates with Google assistant, easy chapter navigation, easy to manage downloads... Everything just worked better than expected. I had a past experience with audible that was far from great. I ended up cancelling my subscription and mostly forgot about audio books, mostly because of UX. Now I'm hooked again.
Prices were also pretty low, although I think they were running a promo because it was a new service.
I don't think they have a subscription model though. It's a pay per book kind of thing. I prefer this way because with the subscription I always felt like I was missing out if I didn't listen to at least 3 books. But there's value in having a subscription model.
Curious if someone have experience with other audio book ecosystems
How long ago did you have Audible? Alexa/Sonos is "coming" but for now I just stream via Airplay to home speakers. As for the rest, I don't have any of those issues with the iOS app, seems pretty easy.
The audible subscription is a much better value, when I get full on credits I can just cancel my sub until I'm ready for more books and don't have to pay $40 or something. If I really want a cheap book (something less than the subscription price, I will just buy outright and save my tokens for something expensive)
My only real complaint with Amazon (and it may be a publisher rule) is you don't get the kindle version for free. If I want to switch between book and text seamlessly I have to buy both versions.
Does anyone know if the author gets less money when buying an audio book vs a text book?
I used to use audible solely. Their incredibly high prices drove me away. Their subscription is stupid in my mind. To me it’s just a way to make users forget so they pay for another month. I’ve been using hoopla for the past 6 months and love it. It’s free with a library card.
I tend towards fairly dense nonfiction like Scale (finished yesterday). That's nearly 20 hours at 1x playback, which the effective price was $15 w/ my membership.
I find a huge amount of value for the effective $1-2 per hour I end up paying, even before considering the no-thought-required return policy and pro-rating the cost from multiple listens.
YMMV, but I consider my audible subscription some of the best value I receive for my money.
I prefer to let my ebook reader just read the ebook to me, Samsung has a great TTS engine and google's isn't bad.
This way I can switch between listening and reading. I generally only listen when I'm driving or working out. I usually prefer to read.
Google's "Family Library" applies to their audio books. Is there an Audible equivalent? Edit: It looks like it is called Amazon "Household Sharing" (requiring Amazon Prime).
I'm not familiar with any particular benefit of one group access option vs. any other. I hope all these digital libraries will start dealing with beneficiaries inheriting things as a first-class scenario soon!
Agreed - I "reread" some books (Diamond Age, Hyperion, etc) and good narration caused me to appreciate sections that I essentially "fast forwarded through" in print book reading (of course, I was much younger when I first read those books).
A good example is Altered Carbon - the narrator is Takeshi Kovacs.
Prices were also pretty low, although I think they were running a promo because it was a new service.
I don't think they have a subscription model though. It's a pay per book kind of thing. I prefer this way because with the subscription I always felt like I was missing out if I didn't listen to at least 3 books. But there's value in having a subscription model.
Curious if someone have experience with other audio book ecosystems