I'm just saying, when you look at the posted schedule here every month, there was at least one new book, and 1-2 new ebooks as well. Made the schedule look a bit more fleshed out, and gave us more options as readers.
But looks don't necessarily reflect reality. As Keith said, the eBooks represented a very, very small segment of Pocket's sales, since few people read them. Heck, they wouldn't have stopped publishing them if people were reading them! In terms of sales and readership, this change has a very minor impact on Pocket's output.
As has been pointed out, there was a good 10 year period or so where it was 2 mmpbs a month, basically every month.
10 years out of the 26 that Pocket has been publishing Trek novels. It was the exception to the rule. If anything, 2 books a month was an excessive pace, glutting the market to the detriment of audience interest and rushing the writers and editors to the detriment of quality. I'd say the current pace is a lot healthier. Especially since it's comparable to the pace the books were coming out between 1988-1993 -- a period when
Star Trek was as hot and successful as it's ever been. Any observer back then would have said the book line was in really great shape. And it still is.
For comparison, let's look at the
Stargate franchise. There have been SG-1 and
Atlantis novels coming out regularly for several years now: three in 2004, three (including a novelization) in 2005, seven in 2006, five in 2007, and three in the first third of 2008. Even with two series, they can't match a once-a-month schedule. By the standards of tie-in literature,
Stargate is very active, and
Star Trek is
amazingly active. Especially when you consider that there isn't even an ST show on the air anymore. Most novel lines don't survive the ends of their series for very long.