Published by rwatstein August 31st, 2008
in digital, Kindle and e-books.
Michael Bhaskar writes: “Over the past few months there has been much discussion of an impending digital revolution in the way we read books. While much of this is hyperbole, there has been incredulity in many quarters that anyone would ever want to read from a screen. We are all attached to books, and the idea seems at first glance anachronistic. However there are some good reasons why it might not go away as quickly as you’d think. Here’s why.”
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Published by rwatstein August 31st, 2008
in Amazon, Kindle and e-books.
Michael Arrington writes: “More rumors about the new Kindle are emerging. The first device will have a similar-sized screen as the existing model but will have a much enhanced form factor. The second will be a large-screen device aimed at students and will come later. Somewhere around a quarter of a million Kindles have been sold to date and Amazon is clearly pushing out the last of the current units via a credit-card promotion on their site that drops $100 off the $359 device.”
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Imagine waking up to find your morning newspaper on the night stand each day without ever having to get out of bed. Or say you want another book to read while soaking up some sun on the beach. And voila! Michael Connelly’s latest book appears in the palm of your hand. Amazon.com wants consumers to go even more digital with their reading habits with its 8-month-old Kindle reading device. Visit Amazon.com, and it’s the first thing you see.
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Published by rwatstein July 19th, 2008
in Kindle and e-books.
Though electronic reading devices may come and go, ebooks and downloadable audio are here to stay, just another piece of the library’s arsenal of offerings and services. Their adoption is one more example that librarians are quick responders to new technologies and formats. What’s the worry?
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Published by rwatstein June 21st, 2008
in technology, Amazon and Kindle.
Is the Kindle about to catch fire? Could Amazon.com’s seven-month-old wireless e-book reader - a rectangular wonder in antique iPod white, able to download any of 125,000 books adapted to its format - be the tipping point that marks the decline and fall of the paper book? If those two questions continue to dominate techno-talk in the book-publishing industry, it’s because book folk, being weaker in gizmo-related prognostication than, say, the devotees of a consumer electronics show, aren’t sure. But earlier this month here at Book Expo America, the yearly meeting of the American publishing business, they ran into one man who seems absolutely sure: Jeff Bezos, founder and master marketer of Amazon,
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Published by rwatstein April 6th, 2008
in books, Amazon, publishing and Kindle.
More than four months after Amazon.com released the Kindle, no one is sure whether the latest e-book reader is really hot _ or not. But publishers believe that the Kindle has helped, if not revolutionized, the tiny electronic market. Amazon.com has received extensive media coverage since unveiling the Kindle on the Monday before Thanksgiving and announcing that the first run had sold out within a few hours. Amazon.com has declined to give sales figures for the Kindle _ at least 2,000, judging from the number of customer reviews _ but has said repeatedly that supply is not keeping up with demand, with the device often out of stock.
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Published by rwatstein January 20th, 2008
in Amazon and Kindle.
Buoyed by media attention and generally positive professional reviews, Amazon.com’s electronic book reader, the Kindle, remains sold out more than a month after its launch. ut according to one measure of popularity — Amazon’s own star rating system — the Kindle has had only lukewarm success. So far, more than 1,300 visitors have ranked the device and have awarded it with an average of 3 1/2 out of five stars.
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Published by rwatstein December 22nd, 2007
in Amazon and Kindle.
Last week, the author set out to deflate the hype about Amazon’s new Kindle e-book reader and to tell you why it will fail. But while researching this column, the author became convinced of the opposite: Kindle is revolutionary and will succeed in the market. Some percentage of book lovers, including the author, will buy one to replace their beloved paper books, magazines and newspapers.
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