Showing posts with label NFT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NFT. Show all posts

Thursday, December 1, 2022

Haunted Hamburger House on the Open Seas

 I've been talking a lot about NFTs lately. And it all culminates with this, the ultimate NFT release of Haunted Hamburger House on the OpenSea platform. You can check it out right here.




The OpenSea mint of Haunted Hamburger House features an eerie 3-D rendering of the inside of the Haunted Hamburger House, which if you pay close enough attention, you will find a lot of paranormal activity happening. Additionally you will unlock access to the digital book files of Haunted Hamburger House in addition to the audiobook recording, narrated by the fantastic voice talent of Ron Gabaldon.




All of that for less that the equivalent of $20 US dollars is an insanely great deal! And don't forget, you get true ownership of the product when purchasing an NFT. And the added benefit of resale value. 

This is not a one-of-a-kind or small run minting. The publisher, D&T NFTs, NFT project, D&T Book Club of Horror, seeks to normalize the purchase of books via NFTs. They are working to offer the NFTs on as many user friendly, accessible platforms as possible. The future of book purchasing is here and you can get in on the ground floor. 




This is the future, not just of books, but the whole world. Let Haunted Hamburger House be your gateway to what's next.

Thursday, November 3, 2022

Start an NFT Bookshelf

 I'd like to make a case for NFT books. Not just because I have an NFT book available for purchase right now but because I believe NFT books are the future of digital reading. Granted, right now, the learning curve is steeper than it should be for mass market appeal but I'm hoping to find a few intrepid believers to step forward and be a part of the future, now.



The best argument for switching your preferred digital library to NFTs is simply ownership. Right now, when you purchase eBooks from any of the big retailers (Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, etc.) you are not truly purchasing the book. What you are doing is unlocking access to the digital files that said retailer owns in exchange for a fee. They can tell you you own the book all you want but read the fine print. If any one of those retailers folds up, your books are gone. If any one of those retailers decided that after you've plunked your hard earned money down on those books that those books do not meet their content guidelines or the author/rights holder has misbehaved, those books will disappear. No returns, no refunds, no exchanges.

You don't truly own your books on Kindle, Nook and Kobo. Any books you purchase on those platforms are not yours. Bottom line.



Then, there is resale value. We know that when we purchase a paperback or hardcover book, we can lend it to a friend, treasure it on a bookshelf or even place it in a little free library for the enjoyment of a random stranger. And, of course, if you're lucky enough to have a used book store or consignment shop around you, you can always sell it to them for some pocket change. Even today, there are platforms like Pango Books and even Amazon where you can resell you're used books on the secondary market.

You can't resell your eBooks though. Best you can do is make them available to lend out to your friends on Kindle. But when you purchase an NFT book, you purchase honest-to-goodness ownership. And with ownership comes the ability to resell. Best of all, with an NFT book is that there is no such thing as 'used'. A digital book is always as new as the day it was first minted (minting is crypto-speak for made available to purchase). Now, depending on how many copies or versions of an NFT book are created will determine its resale value.

When you think of NFTs now, you probably think about digital art work. The image of a cartoon monkey in various outfits, against different backgrounds and sporting different accoutrements likely comes to mind. Each of those monkeys have varying degrees of commonality. Just like trading cards. A lot of trading card images are printed at a high rate of frequency (the commons), some at a lesser rate of frequency (the uncommons), some are printed with a very low degree of commonality (the rares) and in some cases, the ultra-rare, one-of-a-kind card could be made available. Like any market, the price is dictated by the supply and demand. The NFT market is no different. I can choose to print one million copies of my NFT book or I can choose to go Wu-Tang style and print only one NFT copy of the book. So the book will be priced for purchase accordingly and you can resell the book accordingly based on availability of the book in the market.

But, you can resell it. No matter what. If a lot of copies of the book are still available to purchase, you can elect to undercut the market and resell the book at a cut rate. If there were a thousand copies of the book minted and all of them have sold out, then, even though there are a lot of copies out there, none of them are available on the open market any longer and you can resell the book at a premium to those who want but no longer can purchase it from the minter. And, those prized, one-of-a-kind NFT books, well we already know how those go on the secondary market.

What's more, if you are a writer or publisher, you also stand to gain from the resale of NFT books. That's not the case with traditional used book markets. The authors and publishers only get one bite at that apple. Secondary sales go to the owner of the book only. Not necessarily so with NFTs. NFT's come with what are known as 'smart contracts' which are digital stipulations tied to ever NFT. Since NFTs reside on a blockchain, ownership is tracked digitally over a lifetime. Royalties can be written into the smart contract on all future exchanges of ownership of a given NFT. In other words, the creators continue to get royalties in perpetuity on every sale of the book. That's a win all around and an opportunity that has not existed in the world until now.

Haunted Hamburger House:
An NFT Book available now


Those are only a small handful of reasons to start building your NFT bookshelf up starting right now. Ownership, true ownership. That is a thing that has frustrated eBook readers since their inception. Even if you do retain ownership of eBook files, storage is on you. If your laptop, or tablet or phone take a crap, the file is lost forever. NFT books exist on the blockchain. Until the world explodes and the entire infrastructure of the internet is obliterated, your book will always be available to you in some way. Think about it, you could burn your NFT book and still own a perfectly good copy of it the next day. You'll just have to go to Amazon to buy a new tablet. That's okay, Amazon is going to need the business after everyone pulls out of Kindle for NFTs.




Monday, October 10, 2022

Haunted Hamburger House - An NFT Book


Full Cover Wrap for Haunted Hamburger House from 
D&T NFTs



 On October 7, 2022 my new book, Haunted Hamburger House was released on objkt.com as an NFT. Most of you will problably have no idea what that means. That's okay. I'll try to explain.

NFTs (short for Non-Fungible Token) is a digital property that can be bought and sold much like physical objects or services. They are linked to cryptocurrency blockchains meaning, you will likely need to hold some type of cryptocurrency to purchase Haunted Hamburger House or any other NFT. That's not entirely true either but, we'll get into that later.

When you purchase an NFT you are purchasing a digital property with a 'smart contract' attached to it. The smart contract, like any contract, will have agreements and clauses attached to it. That's what makes it work. The contract for an NFT basically states in exchange for X amount of crytptocurrency, you will retain ownership of the digital property attached to this contract. There can be all types of stipulations and further clauses but the basic premises is that it is a legally binding contract giving you ownership of the NFT.

In this case, you will receive ownership of a digital copy of Haunted Hamburger House. In short, you are buying an eBook. And, unlike when you purchase an eBook from Amazon, Barnes & Nobel or any other traditional retail distribution platform where you don't technically own your eBook library, with an NFT you really, truly do retain ownership of the digital book. It won't ever go away.

Some people may be under the impression that an NFT is a unique item, in other words, there is only one NFT copy available. While that is sometimes the case, in this case (and in most cases) this is not true. At the time of release, there are 100 digital copies of Haunted Hamburger House available to purchase. So, it is not exclusive and still there are a finite number of copies available.

Better yet, you can re-sell your NFT book to someone else they way you might sell used books in real life. You can't do that on Kindle, Nook or Kobo.

The concept is exciting to me. In a time when everyone is becoming frustrated with the massive control Amazon has over not only books, eBooks and almost every other consumable good in this world, NFTs seem like a good alternative. Its a way for artists and creators to get their work out to the world in a more direct fashion.

I understand the world is still at the infancy of learning about digital currency, blockchain technology and cryptocurrency. I know this is a very new way of selling books. There is a big learning curve to get people to buy in. That's fine. I believe NFTs, smart contracts and cryptocurrency are the future. I'm happy to use Haunted Hamburger House as a sort of vanguard to help lead the way to the next generation of book markets.

So, if you have a basic understanding of NFTs and cryptocurrency you can follow the link below and pick up your copy of Haunted Hamburger House right now (Objkt.com uses Tezos). Purchasing this way gets you access to the digital copy of the eBook. 

You can also wait just a bit longer for the other NFT release which will include not only the eBook, but also the audiobook version in addition to a breathtaking 3-D image from a scene straight out of Haunted Hamburger House. That version will be available on OpenSea.io and Voice.com very soon and they are separate NFT from the one available on objkt.com. Think of one as the paperback version and the other as the hardcover. Different versions and values of the same book at different price points. Like the version available on objkt.com the other version will also have multiple but finite number of NFTs for sale.  

Here is the press release and link provided by the publisher, D&T NFTs:

We are proud to announce our 2nd NFT book is now available on objkt.com!!!

OpenSea and Voice coming soon!!


We absolutely love these pdf NFTs! No downloading or complicated procedures, simply buy for 5tzs (Tezos) and read from your wallet, it is so cool!!!


Check out Haunted Hamburger House and welcome Frank J. Edler( as a pioneer in this web3 space we love!


https://objkt.com/asset/KT1MUYnLiembMDkmzhTk2GfRWh34d4A4mbby/1


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