Posts Tagged ‘Nook’
Tuesday, November 15th, 2011
Juniper Research says that eReader shipments will reach 67 million by 2016, nearly triple the 25 million devices the company expects to reach the market in 2011.
While this is less than half the 55.2 million tablets that will be shipped this year, the price of the market-leading Kindle has fallen significantly (from $349 to $79) since it was launched, and electronic ink technology will ensure that the device continues to carve out a niche for itself in the wireless device ecosystem.
Amazon’s foray into tablet space further enhances business case for eReaders
Amazon recently announced its first tablet device, which many thought might signal a shift away from dedicated eReaders in its device strategy. However, in tandem, it announced three new Kindle models, two of which include touchscreen technology, borrowed from tablets, and now seen as a ‘must-have’ in mobile devices.
Report author Daniel Ashdown notes: “Amazon has done its homework: it knows there is not a one-size-fits-all device that makes everyone happy.
While the iPad 2 — which it sells — is a premium tablet for Generation Y, Amazon has the wider market covered.” Amazon’s new range of Kindles (priced from $79 to $149) offer a range of options, and the Kindle Fire (priced at $199) offers a mass market alternative to the iPad and others. Barnes & Noble — another leading eReader vendor — is also covering its bases with the Nook Color, a touchscreen LCD eReader with an app store.
Long term – Hybrid displays could signal the end for dedicated eReaders
Juniper’s report has found that, looking further ahead, vendors are exploring hybrid displays which integrate both LCD and electronic ink technology. While LCD is superior for high resolution video, electronic ink provides a more comfortable reading experience and utilises less battery.
The whitepaper ’Tablets, Viva La Evolution!’ and further details of the study, ‘Tablet & eReader Evolution: Strategies & Opportunities 2011-2016′ are available atwww.juniperresearch.com.
Tags: e-reader shipments to triple by 2016, electronic ink, Juniper Research, Kindle, Nook, tablets Posted in Amazon, Hardware, Internet/New Media, Studies, surveys, reports | Comments Off
Tuesday, November 1st, 2011
Erecting a paywall that that requires users to pony up digital subscription money after viewing more than 40 stories in a month actually helped the New York Times boost its Sunday print subscriptions – the first increase in print home delivery for the newspaper in five years.
The cheapest way to get a digital subscription to the New York Times is to subscribe to the Sunday print edition via one of the newspaper’s discount offers. We went for that deal. It’s the first print newspaper subscription we’ve had since the 1990s.
For the six-month period ending September 30, 2011, The New York Times saw strong overall circulation according to the just released Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC) report.
Total average circulation, which includes total print and total digital, was 1,150,589 for Monday-Friday and 1,645,152 for Sunday. The New York Times began offering paid digital subscription packages in the U.S. on March 28, 2011 and this ABC reporting period is the first that captures these new digital subscribers.
According to ABC, The New York Times’s total print circulation for Monday-Friday was 770,586, and total Sunday print circulation was 1,273,219. The New York Times remains the most highly circulated Sunday newspaper in the United States.
In addition, The Times saw Sunday print home delivery circulation of 992,383, an increase of 0.2% year-over-year. This marks the first increase in print home delivery circulation in five years.
For the six-month period ending September 30, 2011, total average digital circulation for Monday-Friday was 380,003 and for Sunday, it was 371,933.
This category of circulation includes all new paid and verified digital subscription packages, as well as paid subscriptions to replica editions and e-readers including Amazon’s Kindle and the Barnes & Noble NOOK.
The success of the Times’ paywall strategy is likely to lead other top newspapers to try something similar. We’re still not sure it will be enough to save printed newspapers in the long run, although a few with national clout such as the Times, the Washington Post, and USA Today may survive longer than others in both modes.
The copy of the New York Times Sunday is the only paper we see in front of a door in our condo complex during the entire week. One home around the corner gets the local Sunday paper (the Raleigh News & Observer). We see no daily papers delivered at all.
We suspect the increasing use of tablets and other mobile devices with decent sized screens, not to mention coming technologies that may make digital devices even more portable and convenient, may hasten the end for many more printed newspapers. On the other hand, people seem much more willing to pay for publications delivered to mobile devices, so effective digital strategies should emerge. — Allan Maurer
Tags: digital newspaper subscriptions, iPad, Kindle, mobile digital subscriptions, New York Times, Nook, paywalls, print subscriptions increased, tablets Posted in Hardware, Internet/New Media, Marketing, smartphones | Comments Off
Friday, August 26th, 2011
E-Readers has emerged as the most popular device in the consumer electronics world in the last couple of years and a new Gobal Industry Analyst report says the market will hit 53.87 million units by 2017. That’s a lot of e-reader devices.
Growing popularity of these handy devices is pushing book, magazine and newspaper publishing industry to redefine their existence in this digital age and in the aftermaths of economic turmoil.
Although sales of e-books presently account for only a small portion of the overall book publishing market, with the passage of time, this segment is forecast to emerge a mainstream market. Digital books already outsell hard and softcover books at Amazon, the company says.
While e-book readers or e-readers have been around since the start of the millennium, the market picked up momentum only in the year 2007, hot on the heels of Amazon’s Kindle, which advanced the concept by allowing books to be wirelessly downloaded rather than plugging into a computer.
Kindle launch started race for new e-readers
The successful launch of the Kindle e-reader started a pulsating race for e-book reading devices in the market, resulting in the launch of several new products in ensuing years. The emergence of e-paper displays is also stimulating growth of e-readers by offering low power consumption and high contrast.
As WiFi, 3G wireless and other connectivity becomes more of a standard feature with e-readers, rapid price erosion, and growing competition from the Apple iPad, content providers and manufacturers are toiling to develop new functionality and features to these devices.
Not only that, a wave of new tablet and e-reader devices are expected later this year and will probably be a feature from hardware makers unless or until one device dominates.
The swamp of new material available for e-book reading devices and the smaller form factor helped e-books and e-readers to reach a new high in the years 2008 through 2010.
Surge of interest driving innovation
The sudden surge in interest is compelling e-readers, e-ink and other producers to innovate at a rapid pace in an effort to match consumer expectations. And just when the world thought e-readers prices couldn’t get any cheaper, came along the recession that gripped most of the world.
Employment rates, household incomes, and disposable incomes have gone down, but with them e-books and e-readers prices as well. Retailers slashed prices for the purpose of keeping their volume sales, and in result profits. Many consumers new to the world of e-books and e-readers purchased their first device, at an ultra affordable price.
Also, the inclusion of touch screen interfaces and color graphics to nearly all contemporary e-readers is a feature that is pulling in consumers who are upgrading, and those who are buying their first e-book reading device.
The arrival of e-readers is also good news for publishers, as creating digital content for e-readers will give a boost to revenues – although publishers do seem to be stumbling about a bit in trying to adjust.
Several of the largest publishers face a class-action suit alleging they colluded to keep Amazon and other digital book marketers from selling books at highly discounted prices. You may have noticed that the $9 best selling digital copy of a book on Amazon became much harder to find. Personally, we think a digital book is overpriced at $12 and up.
As stated by the new market research report, Asia-Pacific and the US together accounts for a lion’s share of the global E-Readers market.
Promising future predicted for e-readers
Technology remains to be further developed and standards remain to be put in place for ensuring an easy access and reading experience. Nevertheless, a sanguine future is forecasted for e-books, with appropriate marketing strategies, adroit audience targeting, promising to infuse vigor into growth patterns.
Major players in the global marketplace include Amazon.com Inc, ASUSTeK Computer Inc, Audiovox Corporation, Barnes & Noble Inc, EC Media International Pvt Ltd, E Ink Corporation, Entourage Systems Inc, Hanvon Technology Co Ltd, Infibeam.com, Intel Corporation, Pandigital, Plastic Logic Ltd, Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, Sharp Corporation, The Sony Group, among others.
The research report titled “E-Readers: A Global Strategic Business Report” announced by Global Industry Analysts, Inc., provides a comprehensive review of market trends, issues, drivers, company profiles, mergers, acquisitions and other strategic industry activities. The report provides market estimates and projections (in US$ Millions) for major geographic markets including the United States, Japan, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and Rest of World.
For more details about this comprehensive market research report –www.strategyr.com/E_Readers_Market_Report.asp
Tags: Apple, digital books, e-readers, global e-reader market report, Global Industry Analysts, iPad, Kindle, Nook, tablets Posted in Amazon, Apple, Hardware, Internet/New Media, Studies, surveys, reports | Comments Off
Thursday, June 30th, 2011
Barnes & Noble, Inc. (NYSE: BKS) is inviting customers to experience the company’s award-winning, bestselling line of NOOK reading devices. Beginning July 1, bring any eReader into a Barnes & Noble bookstore to compare and upgrade to a NOOK device and receive an instant NOOK Book collection — 30 free digital titles valued at $315.
The limited-time NOOK upgrade program is offered with purchase of any popular NOOK device including the All-New NOOK and NOOK Color Reader’s Tablet.
We’re happy with our Wi-Fi Kindle, but we may check out both Nook devices for the sake of comparison. We’re actually fans of dedicated devices: e-readers optimized for books, a camera for photography, and a phone that’s a phone. But the added utility of tablet PC features on a reader could certainly be both useful and entertaining. At least one review of the color NOOK says the device is really more like “half a tablet,” because it is a read-only device. That seems limiting for any tablet type device.
Beginning Friday, while supplies last, customers will receive a free, 2GB microSD card loaded with 30 NOOK Books – from cooking and lifestyle to classics and reference –when they show a bookseller their old device and purchase the NOOK reader that best suits them. Book lovers of all ages will love the All-New NOOK, the Simple Touch Reader, which dozens of leading reviewers have praised as the best dedicated reading device on the market.
The ultra-light, portable 6-inch eReader features a simple, immersive experience with a full-touchscreen and the most-advanced E Ink Pearl display, the longest battery life in the industry with an incredible two months on a single charge and the most social reading experience ever with NOOK Friends. It’s priced at the same amount as the Amazon Kindle Wi-Fi only device, $139.
NOOK Color Reader’s Tablet offers what some critics have proclaimed the best value on the tablet market at just $249.
Device features touchscreen
The award-winning device is sleek and portable, and features a 7-inch color touchscreen ideal for reading a wide variety of content including books (some enhanced with in-page video), immersive children’s picture books with the exclusive AliveTouch technology, an expansive collection of full-color, interactive magazines plus newspapers, and more.
NOOK Color now delivers customers’ most-requested tablet features with a wide selection of high-quality NOOK Apps™ to play, learn, organize and explore, built-in email to stay connected, and an enhanced Web experience. Both NOOK devices connect via Wi-Fi® to Barnes & Noble’s expansive collection of more than two million digital books, periodicals and more, and offer customers access to even more free and exclusive content while visiting any of Barnes & Noble’s more than 700 bookstores.
“We are confident that side-by-side comparisons with other eReaders will show NOOK products to be the superior choice,” said Jamie Iannone, president of Digital Products, Barnes & Noble. “We invite reading lovers to visit their neighborhood Barnes & Noble bookstore to see, hold and touch our innovative NOOK products and encourage them to upgrade their reading experience while kicking off their collection with a limited-time bonus of 30 free NOOK Books.”
The 30 digital books represent a variety of genres including Cooking, Kids, Classics, Humor, Lifestyle, Fiction, Sports, History, True Crime and Reference. Some of the free titles include:The Good Housekeeping Cookbook, Cristina Ferrare’s Big Bowl of Love, Creating Your Best Life, Glory in the Fall: The Greatest Moments in World Series History, 21st Century Crossword Puzzle Dictionary, My Boyfriend Wrote a Book About Me and timeless favorites including Secret Garden and Robinson Crusoe. Learn more about this program.
Tags: Amazon Kindle Wi-Fi, Barnes & Noble, Color Nook, free books for the Nook, Nook Posted in Hardware, Marketing | Comments Off
Monday, June 20th, 2011
The growing success of tablets is leaving many to question the viability of the e-reader market’s sustainability, says market intelligence firrm In-Stat. E-readers still offer the truest reading experience and appeal most to avid readers, but a broader market of consumers are demanding multimedia functionality, like web browsing, video and gaming, in their next mobile device.
Tablets, like the Apple iPad, are optimized to deliver this kind of multifunction experience, and therefore, represent a stronger opportunity for suppliers and manufacturers alike. As a result, In-Stat (www.in-stat.com) is forecasting that tablet shipments will outpace e-reader shipments by the end of this year.
“Of the two, the tablet market is the stronger and more sustainable opportunity,” says Stephanie Ethier, Senior Analyst. “In fact, e-reader manufacturers will soon begin adding tablet-like devices to their lineups in order to take advantage of the tablet frenzy. Barnes & Noble already offers the Color Nook, which is often compared to a tablet, and Amazon, the leader in the e-reader space with its Kindle, will likely launch a tablet device later this year in an effort to compete head-to-head with the iPad.”
At TechJournal South we have tested the Xoom tablet and use a Kindle. While we understand the general users desire for more functions on a tablet-like device, those added features can come with drawbacks such as added weight, screens hard to read in the sunlight, and decreased battery life.
Personally, we prefer a dedicated e-reader, although we suspect we’ll end up with both the light, easy-to-carry Kindle-like readers and a more tablet-like device eventually. The key for us would be a device that uses an E-ink technology like the Kindle’s rather than a backlit LED screen for just reading. Also, a non-reflective screen is essential. It does seem like a good idea right now to wait until the more advanced units hit the market.
Additional market and survey data findings include:
Of the 1,000 US respondents to In-Stat’s latest end-user survey, 38% own a tablet as compared to the 26% who own an e-reader.
Fueled by low prices and continued expansion of e-book content, global e-reader shipments will reach 40 million by 2015.
Tablet shipments will outpace e-reader shipments.
The total semiconductor opportunity for tablet suppliers will reach $13.8 billion in 2015.
The total semiconductor opportunity for e-reader suppliers will reach $1.6 billion in 2015.
Over 60% of future tablet purchasers plan to buy a tablet equipped with both Wi-Fi and 3G connectivity.
By 2015, 15% of all tablet shipments will go into business markets.
–Allan Maurer
Tags: Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Color Nook, forecast, In-Stat, iPad, Kindle, mobile devices, Nook, semiconductor opportunity, tablet computers, tablet market, Xoom Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »
Friday, May 20th, 2011
 Michael Levin
By Michael Levin
The publishing world gathers next week in Manhattan at BookExpo America, its annual trade show, but the one subject attendees won’t be discussing is the coming collapse of publishing and the inevitable disappearance of books.
It’s not just that books are going to Kindles and iPads. It’s that books are going away, and the publishers have no one but themselves to blame.
The traditional New York publishing business model—publish a ton of books, fail to market most of them, and hope that somebody buys something—worked well when publishers had a hammerlock on the distribution and marketing of books. Publishers essentially faced no competition and enjoyed complete control of what books people could publish and sell.
Who needs New York?
In today’s world, however, anyone from John Grisham to John Doe can put up a book online with Smashwords, Lulu, or Kindle Direct, and bypass publishers—and bookstores—all together. Authors can use Google AdWords or social networking strategies to market their books far more effectively than publishers ever could. So who needs New York?
Yes, Kindle and iPad are game-changers. When you read books on a device, a few things change. You’re moving into an environment where you typically don’t pay for content—almost everything online is free. So publishers won’t be able to charge $10 or $12 for an entire book when people only want a chapter’s worth of information. So much for ebooks as a revenue stream for the publishing houses.
Blame Amazon for the colapse
Publishers can also blame Amazon for the collapse of their industry. When you went into a bookstore, you typically browsed and bought a handful of books, each from a different department. Amazon killed browsing. You go on, you find the book you wanted, you pay, and you leave. So instead of buying five books, you buy just one.
But the real reason why books are going to vanish is the remarkably un-businesslike business model of the publishers. Think of General Motors—decades of inefficiency, but without the federal bailouts.
In no other industry do producers actually wait passively to see what products are suggested to them, instead of doing market research to see what people really want to buy. Yet publishers seldom generate book ideas; instead they wait for literary agents to submit proposals. Houses decide which book to publish based on little more than a gut feeling that says, “I think we can make money selling this!”
Yet the books that publishers choose are almost entirely of zero interest to actual bookbuyers. After 9/11, there were a ton of books about 9/11, which nobody bought. Same thing with the Iraq War, the rise of Obama, the economic meltdown, and even, inexplicably, the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
Rehashed business lessons, motivational cliches
Or the books are rehashed business lessons, religious truths, sports clichés, motivational babble, exercise fads, weight loss techniques, or pandering to the political left or the right. Who wants these books? Almost no one.
Most of the major publishers today are owned by international conglomerates who, at some point, will awaken to the realization that English majors in their employ are spending millions of dollars on books that no one wants to read.
As a result, few trade books earn real money for the publisher (and certainly not for the author!). That’s because the publisher bears the entire risk of buying, editing, printing, and shipping copies of the book to bookstores all over the country on a 100% returnable basis. If your local Barnes & Noble doesn’t sell a particular book, it goes right back to the publisher, at the publisher’s shipping cost, for a full refund. Especially in the Internet era, you can’t make money putting books on trucks and hoping someone buys them.
At BEA next week, the attendees will solemnly discuss the latest trends, discuss how to get 70-year-old authors to use Twitter, and generally party like it’s 1989. But for traditional publishing, the party’s over. They just don’t want to realize that it’s time to turn out the lights.
Michael Levin is an eight-time best-selling author, a former member of the Authors Guild Council, and a prolific and highly admired business writer (www.BusinessGhost.com). He has written with Baseball Hall of Famer Dave Winfield, football broadcasting legend Pat Summerall, FBI undercover agent Joaquin Garcia, and E-Myth creator Michael Gerber. He has written for the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, CBS News, the Boston Globe, the Los Angeles Times, and many other top outlets.
Tags: Amazon, Are books about to disappear?, Barnes & Noble, BookExpo America, books an endangered species, collapse of the book industry, ebooks, iPads, Kindle, Michael Levin, Nook, publishing, Twittter Posted in Columns, Hardware, Internet/New Media, Marketing, Mobile, social media | Comments Off
Friday, December 24th, 2010
By Allan Maurer
DURHAM, NC – I love my new wireless Kindle. It has a few drawbacks, like most digital devices, but by and large, if you’re a reader, sooner or later you’ll be buying an e-reader, and you could do worse than a Kindle.
The electronic “ink” technology is as easy to read—usually—as ink on paper. You occasionally need to adjust the way you hold it to eliminate minor—and I emphasize—minor glare. It doesn’t have back lighting, so you’ll need a clip on digital light if you plan to read it in the dark.
But because the device does not need any power to keep the page live while you read and lacks that back light, its battery lasts what seems like forever. I’ve gone a week without recharging and never got close to exhausting the battery.
It’s capacity—text does not take up much space—is enough to hold up to 3500 books. Mine has 270 digital books, including some hefty reference books, and has only used one-third of its 3 gig memory.
The six-inch size is too large to drop in a shirt or pants pocket, but drops into extra storage areas in most attaché cases and messenger bags. Google sells a leather case with a built in light that seems pricey at $50. I used an old automobile manual cover that fit it perfectly and protects it with a padded cover.
The wireless worked perfectly the first time and the only problem I had was that it dropped its wireless connection and then features—such as the one that keeps what you’re reading on top in the home page—stopped working. I called Amazon, which had me install updated firmware, but that didn’t help. Then, an online search took me to a Kindle blog post on the topic. Others had experienced a similar problem. It recommended unplugging my router and then plugging it in again, which I did.
Problem solved.
Includes browser and audio feature
Using the wireless browser, which is labeled experimental, can be a little awkward until you master moving around and typing in urls. But it worked instantly everywhere I tried it, from my home network to a McDonalds. Now when I go out for breakfast or lunch, I’ve got the New York Times, Washington Post, Raleigh News & Observer, TechJournal South or any other site right at my finger tips without needing to haul my netbook or pocket PC along.
It will also read books aloud, although I’m not crazy about the electronic voice, despite efforts to make it sound more human. You can chose a female or male reading voice. The audio is another “experimental” feature and my guess is that it will get better on future versions.
I love that the Kindle automatically opens to where I was last reading in a book. Not needing to hunt for bookmarks or guiltily dogear pages is a small but valuable feature. One thing I do not like is that navigating to deep chapters in books placed on the Kindle from other sources that the Kindle app (which is MobiPocket) is difficult.
The MobiPocket app on my Pocket PC lets me move around via the bar at the bottom, but that appears to be inactive in the Kindle, which has no touch screen features. Basically, that means if you upload a word or text doc to your Kindle, the only way to get to the back of the book is to click through page by page.
Lacks color
Other e-readers are offering color screens, but I don’t miss color on the Kindle. While I’m glad to have the web browser, I don’t plan on using it to do anything except read news and so on. While the lack of color isn’t important to me. It might be to some.
But to get color, you’re back to needing that LED screen, at least so far. If I want to read on an LED screen, I’ll use my netbook (and indeed, have read books on that, my pocket PC, and my regular computer screen). But after working with an LED screen all day and using one for other purposes as well most evenings, I really enjoy the low eye strain of reading on a Kindle.
The navigation controls, while not entirely ideal, are not so much trouble that they bother me and as I’ve gained experience using them, I barely notice their occasional short-comings. It allows you to place your ebooks in collections, a useful feature if you have as many as I do. It also lists all the titles you opened most recently if you prefer. I generally use that option.
Another experimental feature, the voice reader, a male or female electronic voice, is still a bit cold and unnatural sounding to me to use it with much pleasure, but nevertheless came in handy when I was riding in a car at night and didn’t have my LED light with me.
The ability to define any word easily and quickly while reading, to clip segments or make notes and save them to a My Clips file, is particularly useful to a student, writer, teacher or anyone else to whom reading is both necessary for work as well as pleasure.
I’ve bought several books and subscribed to a magazine and a blog, and Amazon delivers a new purchase in seconds. Amazon’s sample feature allows you to read a significant portion of a book—a couple of substantial chapters—before buying it. I’ve used that feature repeatedly. Once, the sample gave me everything I really wanted from a rare book that would cost $80 to buy. Several other times, I was sufficiently hooked to buy books I sampled.
One real plus with all e-readers that will allow you to put text, MS Word, and pdf files on your device, as Amazon does, is that you can now obtain a massive collection of fiction and nonfiction classics for free from the Gutenberg Project and other sources online, including Amazon itself and Google books. Here’s another place for classics that also has a nice selection of modern thrillers, mysteries and sci-fi that’s out of copyright: Munseys.
The Kindle software, essentially identical to Mobipockets, can also be used on a PC and assorted other mobile devices.
Amazon grumbles
I’ve heard some rumblings in the digital community about Amazon’s digital rights policies and their pressure on publishers to keep best seller prices under $10 for digital editions, but my guess is that Amazon is so much the dominant book seller now, it will continue to be a dominant player in the e-reader market, not something I’m as comfortable saying about the Barnes & Noble Nook, Sony’s entry or other devices.
The NOOK also uses E-Ink technology and allows you to lend the books you buy. I read recently that someone even downloaded the mobile game “Angry Birds” and played on a color Nook. From what I’ve read and heard, it’s likely to be a strong player, especially now that it offers competitive pricing (with the least expensive model only $149. Although you have to be concerned about the state of Borders’ survival, considering its financial difficulties, lately.
While those other readers offer some enhanced features and clearly have their fans, I’d bet money that the Kindle stays right up there in the e-reader wars.
Tags: Allan Maurer, Angry Birds, e-readers, Kindle review, Nook, WiFi Kindle review Posted in Hardware, Reviewed | 5 Comments »
Wednesday, August 25th, 2010
SEATTLE, WA – Amazon says its new, less expensive Wi-Fi enabled Kindles are selling faster than any other Kindle launch. Barnes & Noble recently saw revenue gains led by electronic book sales. The iPad displays electronic books beautifully, and the e-reader revolution seems fully upon us.
In the four weeks since the new models were introduced, Amazon says the new Kindles outsold more than any other product on both Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk.
The new Kindles started shipping to customers this week. We’re eagerly awaiting ours.
E-books going full steam ahead
The e-book revolution is gathering steam daily after a decade of hype and numerous launches of various e-reader devices.
Now, however, the Kindle, Barnes & Noble’s Nook, and Apple’s iPad are leading a full fledged move into the era of the electronic book.
Amazon says electronic books formatted for the Kindle are outselling hardcovers and the company says it sold three times as many Kindle books in the first half of this year as it did in the first half of 2009.
Barnes & Noble recently posted their best revenue numbers in some time largely due to a growing share of the e-book market. Still, the e-book revolution holds many questions for the fate of the big box book retailers and Border’s is already faltering.
While we have a room full of hardcover and softcover books, we welcome the e-reader revolution. Not only do they save space, they make an entire library portable as never before.
Value-added devices
They have the added value of easily keeping your place, the ability to make and keep notes, built in dictionaries and Wikipedia access on some, and in the case of the new Kindles, the ability to connect to the Internet via Wi-Fi.
An e-reader can hold more books than our entire home library (about 3,000 on the Kindle, Amazon says), which puts an end to the heavy book bag some omnivorous readers carry everywhere.
The flowering of the electronic book era poses some ongoing questions, though.
How will it affect on-demand online publishing ventures such as Bob Young’s Lulu.com? (We plan to ask him that in an interview prior to his appearance at this year’s third annual Internet Summit in Raleigh, NC,, Nov. 17-18.
They are bound to have numerous effects on the traditional publishing industry. Amazon is currently selling top hardcover books for $9 in Kindle versions and less for many books. Many traditional hardcovers are priced at three times or more of that figure.
E-book readers have also already stirred up some controversy regarding whether they should be considered computers at coffee shops and restaurants that forbid computer use at certain times so they can keep turning over tables.
Moreover, there is bound to be some dueling over e-reader formats and shakeout among device providers.– Allan Maurer
To contact TechJournal South Editor & Writer Allan Maurer: Allan at TechJournalSouth dot com.
Tags: Amazon, Barnes & Noble, e-book readers, e-books, electronic books, iPad, Kindle, Nook Posted in Internet/New Media, Marketing | 1 Comment »
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