Amazon has announced that they have struck a E-Book deal with Andrew Wylie, who is the head of an exclusive New York agency, whose clients include Salmon Rushdie, Oliver Sacks and Phillip Roth. Andrew also represents the estates of William S. Burroughs of the Beat Generation fame.
Amazon will be exclusively carrying the works of these authors in its E-Book Store, which caters to the Kindle line of E-Readers. This is a two prong effect, for one this deal cuts out the auhors paperback dealers out of the loop. It also puts Amazon ahead in the very competitive e-book store arena.
Exclusive deals like this is nothing new in the literary world of publishing and the E-Book world. As the e-book market heats up, there’s going to be some real competition for talent, and talent is going to start pushing for deals as well. Take James Patterson for example, who sells the most electronic books on Amazon. In a recent report in a three month period he has sold 800,000 E-Books. You can be sure that has authors like himself get better deals offered to them for royalties percentage, authors will begin to wield more bargaining power then they have had in the past.
Over the next few years we are likely to see a profound shift in famous Authors establishing exclusive relationships with dedicated E-Book Store. Are you a fan of Charlaine Harris? If you want her in e-book form, you need a Kindle.
This has the potential to be a rather harrowing endeavor for the average customer who wants to buy one e-reader and read books that have been assigned to another. Having book stores roping up exclusive deals, means you will likely have to purchase more than one device in order to read books in electronic form.
You can bet your bottom dollar that the major e-book stores such as Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Boarders, and Kobo are aware of this situation and might try to fight it with time sensitive exclusive deals. Maybe we will see a situation where exclusive deals on new novels are done with one major e-book store for the first few months, and then others get a chance to sell the book. Or, maybe we will see a sales based model, where the first 400,000 copies sold are with Amazon, and then the other stores get to market the book as well.
As the exclusive deals that Amazon has just struck mainly permeate in the digital world, it does have a profound effect on the paperback world. When Amazon made this deal, it was likely without the knowledge or consent of the distribution companies that print the books, store them in a warehouse and then ship them to various book stores accross the country. With no notice given to tangible book world, it will create an escalating crisis of profound proportion.
The E-Book vs the Novel War is just begining, and Amazon has just fired the first shot.
Although Elonex is not a very well known company in North America, it has a devote following in Europe and Australia. They had a number of past e-readers to break into the market with the Elonex 610EB and Elonex 511EB Electronic Readers. With their new offering the 710 EB they just might get their break into the North American market to entrench themselves as viable e-reader contenders to Amazon, Sony, and Barnes and Noble.
The Elonex 710EB has a full color 7 inchTFT touch screen which makes it one of the first color e-readers using TFT. It is backlite and very easy on the eyes. It will also come with WI-FI built into it, and will feature an ARM processor.
This little device will also allow you to play back audio books, MP3 music and display photos and videos. It will allow you to read ebooks in the ePub, TXT, RTF and PDF formats. You also can surf the internet, send and receive emails and more! Battery life is claimed to be 8 hours of use.
Although the final details in terms of specs are unknown at this time, from the pictures it appears to be using a Google Android based operating system. Our best guess that it will be using Android 1.6, which would mean that it would not be a multi-touchscreen device. It is also unknown if it will have access to the android market place.
The final price on this unit will be $250.00 and will be available July 31 2010. You can pre-order it today on Amazon.com
Just as Barnes and Noble today are offering a new WI-FI only version of the Nook for 149.99, and today is now offering their original Nook from $249.00 to $199.00. Amazon struck back today and offered yet another price reduction on its Kindle 2 E-Reader to $189.00
Amazons price reductions marks the 3rd time within one calender year that Amazon has reduced the price on the Kindle 2. When the Kindle 2 orgignally launched in Feb 2009 it had the price of $349. In July 2009 they again reduced the price to 299.99 and in October when they launched the Kindle 2 World Edition they dropped the price yet again to $259.00.
Amazons slashing of the price on the Kindle 2 to $189.00 and the Nook price reduction to $199.00 is making E-Readers more accessible to the masses! With the success of the Kobo E-Reader with an entry level of $150.00, many people opted to the Kobo, because all of the other good e-readers cost in the upper 250.00′s
With many more solid e-readers being available for under $200.00 they are more accessible to people on a budget now then ever before. We see the price reductions as a WIN for the customer who wants more variety of an e-reader for less then $200.00
Welcome to another edition of the Good E-Reader week in review, where we cover the most important news on E-Reader, Slate and Tablet PC’s! This week was a very newsworthy week with some new product announcements, some mergers and acquisitions and more exciting news!
At Good E-Reader we know some days you just do not have time to read all of the articles we post on a daily basis, so we post the most news worthy items in an easy to digest format. If you to stay up to date with all of the latest news subscribe to our Good E-Reader Magazine! Also you can read the full news item by clicking on the title of the article. Finally, be sure to check out our Weekly Podcast on iTunes.
IRiver, the South Korean maker of MP3 players, and who already have experience in the E-Reader market with their “Story” are teaming up with LG to bring to the market a new E-Reader to the USA market. The IRiver story is mainly marketed in Europe and in some parts of Asia. It is known to be comparable to the Amazon Kindle 2, in that it has a full keyboard and is 6 inches. It also has 800×600 resolution and 8 levels of grey scale. On the aspect of format supportability, the IRiver once again offers ePub, PDF, TXT readability and is able to display DOC, PPT and XLS files as well. IRiver also supports JPEG, BMP and GIF format, something that will be liked by those who take pleasure in reading comics. This is much unlike the Kindle that is limited to be compatible with only those supported by amazon.com and the PDF file formats. It sells in Germany, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, China and Russia for around $299.
IRiver and LG Display plan to set up the $5 million joint venture, to be called L&I Electronic Technology, in Dongguan, in China’s Guangdong province, by August, with a 51% equity investment from LG Display. IRiver will invest the remaining 49%. The companies say they aim to produce 1 million units annually by 2011 from river’s existing plant in Dongguan. Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp buys Skiff E-Reader Technology
Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. has gobbled up Skiff, the company that makes e-readers and is the creator of the software that acts as the provider of information to tablets and e-readers as well as smartphones. Skiff had been set up by publishers Hearst Corp. as a separate company that is credited to have developed the back-end technology that would make it possible to render newspapers and magazines on e-readers in a manner that would mimic the original print publication. In fact, it had also created a device based on e-ink technology though News Corp. does not seem to be too interested in the hardware aspect of it all. So it might not be seen as the manufacturer of any hardware that could rival the Apple’s iPad or the Kindle from Amazon.
What makes the Skiff platform especially suitable to reading the online versions of newspapers and magazines is its large display area measuring 11.5 inches that has a resolution of 1200 x 1600 pixels. The device also boasts of rich topography and dynamic updates. Also, in spite of its rather large size, the Skiff e-reader is quite handy at 17.5 ounces at which it is lighter than the Kindle DX.
The Skiff e-reader also incorporates a sturdy design feature that has been made possible with the use of a stainless steel foil at the base so that the Skiff e-reader is shatter-proof, crack-proof and even flexible. Another unique design feature of the Skiff e-reader is its touch sensitive screen which, instead of glass, is made of a metal-foil that can accept both finger and stylus input and is housed in a magnesium housing. This has contributed to the device being incredibly strong and sturdy. The end result, the Skiff can even be bent to a certain extent without breaking. All of these and a lot more has led many to believe the Skiff to be the next big thing to hit the online newspaper publishing industry.
News Corp. on the other hand has several major newspapers like the Wall Street Journal and New York Post under its fold which also includes some major news channels like the Fox network, the 20th Century Fox and Fox News. The buying spree did not stop here as the company has also picked up a stake in another company Journalism Online – a brainchild of three enterprising individuals, L. Gordon Crovitz, ex Wall Street Journal Publisher, Steven Brill and ex cable exec Leo Hindery Jr. Journalism Online look for means that would enable newspapers and magazines to get paid from their online readers for the news that they make available.
“Today’s developments underscore News Corporation’s ongoing commitment to create strong business models that support journalism at a time of great change in our industry.” “Both Skiff and Journalism Online serve as key building blocks in our strategy to transform the publishing industry and ensure consumers will have continued access to the highest quality journalism,” said Jon Miller, Chief Digital Officer, News Corporation about the two business ventures.
Also, the two business deals is perhaps another step forward to what Rupert Murdoch had always dreamt of, that of making available news to people as a paid service.
But as per the latest slate pc news, Toshiba is keen to give their slate dreams another chance. Also, to make more of an impact, they have decided to go for two 7 inch screens instead of the single screen of the same size that had adorned the JournE Touch. The only other dual screen tablet that had created quite a ripple was the Microsoft Courier though the tablet slipped into oblivion in the most unceremonious manner. Of course there is the Entourage Edge and it’s currently available in the market though it isn’t the device that can make one go crazy.
This can act to Toshiba’s advantage in their effort at making a credible impact in the dual screen tablet segment with the GuideBook – the new tablet that Toshiba is readying. There is also news that Toshiba has dumped the Tegra 2 chip in favour of something else. That something else is a mystery though. Also, there were reports that Toshiba will leave it upon someone else for producing their tablet devices, someone who already has experience in doing something similar. But as per the latest news, the entire tablet project will be an in house affair right from the design to their manufacturing. Also, the GuideBook right now is likely to run the Windows 7 though the Android too can’t be ruled out. There is also talk of a larger tablet with a 10 inch screen sometime later that might be based on the Android and will bring Toshiba directly in line with the Apple’s iPad.
So it remains to be seen if two screens in place of one can bring better luck for Toshiba in the Tablet/Slate segment. In fact, much has changed since the days of the JournE Touch. There is the iPad now along with a few more that have made the consumers to demand even more. So for Toshiba to make an impact, they will perhaps have done more than just doubling up their efforts. The good news is, Toshiba is likely to formally announce the tablet as early as by the end of this month only.
The ‘BlackTab’ Tablet device that was rumoured to be under development from the makers of the BlackBerry range of smartphones is back in the news once more and this time, with more details of the elusive tablet. Each bit of news is clearing the haze bit by bit so that that what we are getting is a clearer picture of the device though the problem is it is painfully slow. However, the latest piece of news doing the rounds right now is that the BlackPad tablet will feature a QWERTY keyboard that will slide out of the touchscreen slate though there will also be an on screen keyboard that can be used when the BlackPad is in portrait orientation.
Also, the latest slate pc news has it that the BlackPad will have an integrated 5 MP camera while on board storage is tipped to be in the range of around 4 GB. What is also evident is that the BlackPad tablet will rely on tethering in order to power its mobile network. However, the thing that can play spoilsport is that users will be required to have a BlackBerry smartphone to get 3G data connection. So this would make the BlackPad as a constant companion to the BlackBerry and if indeed this is true, it would be interesting to see how consumers react to this. Wi-Fi though will be a standard feature on the BlackPad.
The BlackPad is also likely to include a universal search feature that will enable users to search for both local as well as online information. Among other details available of the BlackPad is that the tablet will run BlackBerry OS, version 6.
However, none of what has been mentioned so far has been confirmed by RIM while there has been no denial either. So that keeps the rumours alive. Surely expectations are high from the makers of the BlackBerry smartphone. Research in Motion made everyone sit up with their BlackBerry smartphones that perfected the idea of mobile e-mail and with tablets being the current craze, it only is logical for RIM to register its presence in this competitive segment as well.
According to a recent job posting on the Amazon Jobs Website and CareerBuilder.com, Amazon is looking to hire key personal for a “Stealth Project” to make video games. One of the first posts was for a Senior Product Manager of Digital Video Games, who would be responsible for overseeing the entire project and then recommend key staff positions, such as various project leads.
It is our opinion that the Amazon Kindle 2, Kindle DX and the new the anticipated Kindle Slim due this September will have games available. Many E-Readers right now have small games available for them now, both issued from the company, such as the Barnes and Noble Nook with their Sudoku and other games. Also independent Developers also make small games for Android driven E-Readers such as the Spring Design Alex. Its proven that small casual games that are either made by the E-Reader company or small home brewed applications do indeed work via E-Ink, one has to wonder if Amazon will step up the game and offer developers a custom SDK in order to make games for their Kindle line of E-Readers. This approach is something that the other E-Reader companies do not provide for the programing communities.
Amazon has issued a SDK for application development a few months ago, to select Beta Test Developers and have had job postings the last few months for Internet Web Browser development. Amazon has stated internally that they will likely see a new web browser debuted this September.
Here and There
Pandigital is going to release a new firmware update for its Novel E-Reader! As you recall, many of their units were not functioning well, and Kohl offered a recall on the items. Pandigital is offering a new firmware fix, but it does not really address the WI-FI connectivity problems.
Rumour of a new Pandigital E-Reader with more RAM that will replace the existing one. It is currently being reviewed by the FCC.
HP was in the news again during a tech conference last week when they were discussing how modern operating systems such as Windows 7 were not very feasible for Mobile computing, such as Slate and Tablet PC’s. This is ironic because only a few months ago HP made a few promotional videos on their Windows 7 Slate PC! With their acquisition of Palm last month and rumours of the HP Hurricane making the rounds running WebOS, HP has been very silent on what their game plan is regarding Slate and Tablet PC’s. We are speculating that until the deal for Palm officially goes through towards the end of July, we might hear some public announcements on their future on Mobile Computing.
Despite the fact that the Apple iPad is selling quite well in Japan, that is not stopping NEC from developing a new Tablet PC called the LifePad. The first thing that hits you with the LifeTouch is that it break away from the usual conventional tablet design of any size where the entire front end is almost entirely made up of the screen. Instead, what you have with the LifeTouch is a 7 inch WVGA TFT LCD touchscreen that’s relegated to the right edge of the tablet while the left edge is taken up by buttons which includes a D-Pad that make navigation through the menus and other apps like the browser a breeze. Looks wise, the LifeTouch may look like a mobile gaming console like the Nintendo DS though the entire design balances out nicely. The screen has a resolution of 800 x 480 pixels and is housed in a case that measures just 219 x 119 x 13.9mm while weighing merely 400 grams. The screen is receptive to both finger and stylus inputs.
Behind the screen lies an ARM Cortex-A8 processor though it hasn’t been revealed if the processor is from Freescale, Texas Instruments or Samsung. Coupled to the processor will be a 256MB Mobile DDR RAM and will come pre-installed with the Google’s Android operating system, version 2.1. A SDHC slot allows for expanding the on board storage further in case more space is needed while the two USB port (one full and another mini) will let users to attach more gadgets to the LifeTouch. No pricing details are available.
Ever since the Kobo E-Reader hit the retail markets last month, many people are having problems with non-Kobo ePub e-Books. We posted a solution on our blog, as well as files and a video tutorial we made that documents the entire process. Check it out.
Speaking of the Kobo E-Reader, the last major platform to not have an official Kobo application, now does! Rejoice users of Google Android enabled devices. Kobo has just released a new version of their E-Book reader for Slate PCS, Tablets and Smartphones such as the Nexus One and Droid.
That about wraps it up for the Good E-Reader week in review! If you want to know more about any of these stories, subscribe to our Good E-Reader Magazine! It gets bigger every month and gets delivered electronically to your Email INBOX! It’s in PDF form and now has linking features and Videos! You can read our magazine on any Tablet/Slate/Netbook and PC! Even If you have a smartphone or iPad, it’s all good! For more news on all things E-Reader, keep checking back on our blog daily for more news! If you want to get the latest news, firmware, guides, tutorials or E-Books check out the Good E-Reader Forum! We have trained staff to address any questions or concerns!
Users of Pandigital’s new E-Reader are now offered a chance to return their unit for a full refund, due to massive software bugs. Some of the problems entailed a faulty touch screen, substandard web-browsing and WI-FI being unable to connect at all.
Although the Pandigital Website has no announcement of the Recall, you can either contact Kohl or Pandigital for refund information. Pandigital has said in a small statement that once the software gets fixed, it will be retailed again.
The Pandigital E-Reader is still only running Android 2.0 with no plans as of yet to access Google Android Market Applications.
Barnes and Noble are offering a free $50.00 Gift card with purchase of a Nook E-Reader from either Bestbuy or the Barnes and Noble website, effective immediately!
Although there are plenty of e-readers to choose from in the stores these day with the Amazon Kindle being sold in Target Stores nationwide, and Sony E-Readers, the advantage goes to Barnes and Noble this father’s day as the gift of choice.
“The company will provide a free $50 Barnes & Noble gift card with any Nook eBook Reader purchase through Barnes & Noble and Best Buy,” the press release notes. “Recipients can instantly stock up on their great summer reads, choosing from the expansive Barnes & Noble eBookstore, or show their style with a Nook accessory.” The Web site claims the gift card is a “limited-time offer”).
The Latest Good E-Reader News has Barnes and Noble, Sony and Amazon targeting the publishing sphere for lower costs of E-Books to be determined by the publishers themselves in the hopes to stave off fierce competition from the Apple iPad and the growing number of indy bookstores such as Kobo.
This new agreement will provide major publishers control over pricing for E-Books. According to a leading industry insider, Amazon will abandon its entry level fee for popular bestsellers and new releases from $9.99 to a price to be determined by publishers such as Simon and Schuster and HarperCollins.
Meanwhile, Barnes & Noble’s has already adapted this policy and it has already taken effect. Sony said yesterday that several major publishers will set the price of most e-books at US$12.99 to US$14.99, a shift from retailers deciding the pricing.
Barnes and Noble, Amazon and Sony dominate the mainstream market for e-book purchases, since Sony and Amazon dominate the current e-reader sphere. With the fluctuation of e-book prices, it will be interesting to see if books will increase in value for new releases or go down in value.
An Anonymous publishing contact as basicall confirmed that publishers are gravitating towards the the “agency” model for e-books — where the publisher is the seller such as Barnes and Noble, Sony and Amazon is the “agent” If there are specific taxes to be levied in the USA or now Canada it is up to Amazon to collect these.
We are seeing the publishing companies throwing more weight behind the lucrative e-book market that is seeing record profits being raised and competition from Apple is stimulating competitive advantages of lowering e-book costs.
It is an e-reader war like no other! The gold standard of the old school generation we have Amazon and their Kindles! Leading the packs for the new school of tablets and slates we have the Apple and the iPad. Both are at the top of their class and looking to succeed.
At the proverbial high on security and no leaked answers affair, Apple unveiled in January the iPad, the worst kept secret in most technology circles. After a week after the Apple event industry experts said it would be the demise of existing electronic book readers, including Amazon’s Kindle. Luckily, Jeff Bezos and co. had a better idea. Instead of attempting to show the world why their Kindle was better, which in some ways it still is, they decided to embrace the iPad. Amazon chose to not only jump on the iPad bandwagon, but also to be ready for the explosion scheduled to happen on April 3rd, by introducing an iPad version of their Kindle app.
Fast forward to present day, the iPad is here and so is Amazon’s Kindle App for the iPad. Get it for free from the App Store and your iPad transcends into a euphoric state for Kindle owners. Bright, Accessible, and much more sleek looking. Having said that, I can’t imagine why someone with $489 (current price for the comparably sized Kindle DX) would not gather up the extra $10 and get an iPad. The iPad does everything the Kindle can do, and so much more. With the Kindle App, every book you previously purchased for your Kindle is instantly available on your iPad, at no additional cost. This is a major selling feature for people whom have had a Kindle and were looking to upgrade their device. if you were to make the switch to the IPAD for a more versatile device, you should still retain all of your books. Kindle is working on a counter to the iPad, more on this later.
The Kindle App works much like iBooks. You have a list of books, which can be opened with the touch of a finger, and you also have the Kindle store. Unlike iBooks, the store is nothing more than a browser interface to Amazon.com. This is a disjoining feature, as it is not seamless and fluid. Instead you are bounced to Safari and in the browser loads the established Kindle App Store. Once you link the Amazon app with your Amazon account, you have the option to purchase books and send them directly to your iPad. After the purchase is complete, a button appears to send you back to the Kindle app. Your recently purchased book is available within seconds. Most (if not all) of the books have samples you can download, allowing readers to preview books before purchasing.
Is the Kindle App an iBook killer? Hardly. Take for Instance the Kobo E-Reader, Barnes and Noble and the Sony E-Reader. They both have amazing and extensive catalogue of books. Some even give you deals on books the other companies don’t give you. This means that some of your favourite titles will only be found in one of these stores. Good thing, Kobo books already had one of the first Apps available for the IPAD for their own bookstore. Lucky for iPad owners, the iPad is the only device that allows you to read books from multiple stores. Rumour has it that Barnes and Noble and a few other e-reader companies functioning on the Google Android System will be launching their own app to the Apple App Store, giving people more choice and variety and making extra money from people that do not have their e-reader device. Further rumor and speculation says that Sony is going to make an app version of their story for the ipad to not diminish any of their profits.
More on this article in the May Edition of our Good E-Reader Magazine! If you like the iPAD it was our feature story for the our magazine. It is still available, subscribe today, its only $1.99! Support the folks at Good E-Reader to break the latest news on Tablet Slates and E-Readers
The latest E-Reader and Slate news has the leading European mobile phone manufacturer Nokia is working on its own secret tablet and Slate PC, scheduled to reach stores later this year. Nokia has neither confirmed nor denied this startling new development, but industry experts agree it is in development.
Nokia is not alone in wanting to release a Slate PC this year. Major electronics companies and computer manufacturers such as Samsung, Dell, and HP are working on similar slate and tablet PC devices.
On April the 3rd 2010, Apple sold more than 300,000 iPad’s on the tablet computer’s first day in stores, a strong showing that roughly matched industry forecasts and mirrored the iPhone ‘s debut in 2007. With Apple setting the bar for Slate’s and Tablet sales in 2010 many companies are wanting to jump in right away, and with good reason. Slate PC’s are a natural evolution of the netbook and laptop. Netbook’s never really caught on that well, but for portable computing, slates blow netbooks out of the way with their processing and storage.
The tremendous success of the Apple iPhone totally caught Nokia off guard, and it took almost two years for the Finnish firm to roll out its first mobile model with a large touch screen. Nokia last year attempted to enter the PC industry when it introduced its first laptop. It has sold small phone-like devices for browsing the Internet since 2005, but with very limited success.
If you are not familiar with Nokias foray into a PC it made a touchscreen in 2005 called the 770. The 770 ran Maemo and was more of a PDA than a laptop, designed to be used with a stylus. It was awkward to try to use and should never have made it past the prototype stage.
Right now the supply chain for the Nokia Tablet is gearing up for a fall release. It has to be on the shelf by September-October to meet the Christmas Holiday rush season, which saw Amazon last year sell over two million e-readers in December. Some rumours speculate that the Nokia Slate will run Microsoft’s Window 7 Mobile software but others persist that Nokia might be using its own MeeGo operating system. This new OS was made in conjunction with Intel.
Nokia cannot afford to miss another golden opportunity in developing its own rival slate/tablet pc. They missed out on the IPHONE phase while other companies like RIM took advantage of the market share with their Blackberry Storm and others with Google Android devices. If Nokia is to make a run at the slate market, they have to do it in the last six months, or else Apple will cornerstone the market.
Have something great to say about this article? Feel free to comment below, or you may elect to check out our e-reader forum.
The HP Slate is set to hit the market on June 7 of this year. The prices for this unit are now known, starting: $549 for the 32GB model and $599 for the 64GB version. In comparison, the introductory price of an iPad starts at $499 for a Wi-Fi-only 16GB model.
The Slate is touted to be more powerful than a smart phone and close at heels with a PC. It is perfect for reading, surfing the web and taking entertainment on the go. Resembling an Amazon Kindle DX in size, it aims at bridging the gap between laptops and smart phones. HP’s Slate will run on full version of Windows 7, complete with multi-touch capabilities. It comes with 3G connectivity as a standard feature and may cause a lesser pocket-pinch than iPad’s $629.
The 8.9 inch screen will have multi-touch capabilities, which you can flip through and experience a book in full color. The Wi-Fi capabilities allow you to download content. It will focus on content consumption including games, e-books, music, videos and web browsing. It will also be powered by FLASH and will be compatible with all Adobe Programs and Support, such as Shockwave.
The HP Slate will feature a SD card reader (up to 128GB) and a USB 2.0 port, together with a conventional SIM card tray. In addition, the HP Slate features a dock connector used for powering the device, audio, and HDMI out. The leaked specs also show the HP Slate will be powered by a 1.6-GHz Intel Atom processor with 1GB of DDR2 RAM memory (non-user upgradable). T
The HP Slate will run on a HP touch-optimized UI, based on Windows 7 Home Premium, though only real-life tests will show if the interface is as fluid as the promotional videos depict it. Finally the HP Slate will feature two cameras: a VGA front camera for video calling and a 3MP camera on the back .
The HP slate and Microsoft Courier is our lead in story for next months edition of the Good E-Reader Magazine.
We would like to publicly announce that our new product the Good E-Reader Magazine is now available! The Good E-Reader magazine focuses on the latest E-Reader, Slate and Tablet PC news! We dive into the world of technology and give you the latest news, product reviews, and interviews with some of the industry’s leading companies.
In our April edition of the magazine we have an Interview with the CEO of Notion Ink and talk to them about their new Adam slate. We also give you a comprehensive Apple I-Pad review and new product launches such as the Spring Design Adam, The Microsoft Courier, the Dell Slate, WePAD, and a review of the new Nintendo 3DS
We have worked very hard to provide the definitive professional magazine whose pure focus are E-Readers and Slates. We are very proud of this and soon we will be at major Book Stores and your local magazine rack.
For a preview of the magazine please click on the picture below, if you would like to subscribe click on the Subscribe link. The Price is $1.99 for the first issue, then $3.99 a month. We deliver the Magazine to you in PDF format via E-Mail until we have a full print edition and you can elect to receive the Digital Version, the Hard-Copy, or both. The Preview copy will not allow you to read the articles, it is meant to show you the magazine and design.
Apple has now released Guided Setup and configuration videos on how to setup and use common programs such as Safari, Email, how to use the iPod and iTunes. We also get a guided preview on what iBooks and iWork are going to look like.
Be sure to subscribe to our Good E-Reader Magazine launching this April, we have the latest news on E-Readers and Slates.
The e-reader industry is abuzz with activity. New e-readers are getting launched almost every other day. The existing ones are being upgraded while new technology is being introduced. Every other company is exploring tie-ups with other manufacturer, e-book seller, and publisher or technology partner, all with the aim of garnering a bigger share of the fast expanding e-reader market. It seems e-reader news is getting updated almost every minute.
For instance, Sony is now supporting the open ePub e-book format. They are also in the process of developing a new e-reader that will have cellular data connectivity. Barnes and Noble too has announced that they are developing a new device in collaboration with Irex technologies. And if these are not enough, mighty Apple has come up with the iPad which many believe will be the cat among the e-reader pigeons. In fact, such news snippets would go on and on.
However with all the new promises, it is the software side of the story that is grossly missing. And it is on this front where the battle of e-books and e-readers is going to be fought and won.
The e-reader market is witnessing, in recent times, a rise in quality and decrease in prices. Display is getting amazingly close to that of printed paper. Battery life too is approaching reasonable expectations.
But the real reason for e-readers becoming so advanced is the growth of the software side of these products. That is because one needs a great software and hardware combination for an e-reader to really become popular. The web stores have a huge role to play in this as well as these serve as the point from where users can do a search, get the book, and have them downloaded into the e-reader in no time. For instance the Amazon Kindle’s storefront that is by far the best in the industry. They know what their readers are looking for. So users can search for an e-book on the web store and purchase it within just 35 seconds. Users will have to spare another 35 seconds to have the e-book delivered in their devices and start reading with them. Let anyone come with anything that is better than this.
Next is the web store by Sony. Both the stores allow you to search by price but since Amazon also provides a huge list of free e-books, often it takes time to look for a title. Sony does a better categorization of its books, but sadly, one needs to download e-books only through its desktop client. B&N.com is nothing but miserable.
But perhaps an ideal e-reader would be one that uses the Kindle kind of application on an iPhone or iPod touch phone. This way you would not need to carry another device with you. It will be a one-stop shop for your phone and reader applications. In such a scenario, the kindle reader will be light and wont drain out your iPhone battery. However, this wont fit the bill for a graphics rich textbook. The rich text wont be clear and its best to go for an e-reader then.
If you have an iPhone and are interested in e-reading, it’s a simple task downloading the application and browsing the Amazon’s web store from where you can source tons of free e-books. So in case you don’t have an iPhone, then its only economical to purchase an iPod touch and use it for reading e-books. The cost is same as the Kindle hardware device. The downside is that you will need to be in WiFi range to download your e-books while on the iPhone, you can download over the cellular network, much like the Kindle hardware.
There are other readers available for phones. If you have a blackberry or a palm, then the B&N reader application or the Mobipocket fits the bill. However, both of them are not as easy as the Kindle and would need you to download the e-book on the desktop first. The B&N app is particularly cumbersome and it seems you have to contend with too many moving parts at a time.
Sony e-readers have been made compatible with the ePub apps. The pub books can be read on iPhone as well but only with Stanza. It’s a tedious process though, which is much unlike what you experience in the Kindle.
Amazon has a good web store compared to Sony and B&N. Google too has digital version of many books but doesn’t contain many best sellers. Amazon is far better in the e-book section and underlines the fact that a good web store helps in selling more e-books.
As the e-reader market grows, e-books need to become more universal. For example Kindle should be able to read ePub formats. Another important thing is to eliminate is the digital rights management to make e-books far more accessible.
Nonetheless, nothing can replace the experience of a physical book store and book reading but as this market grows, it will definitely make e-book reading something to experience.
Be at our Good E-Reader Blog for more updated e-reader news.
E-Readers are also dealt with extensively in our Good E-Reader Forum and its definitely worth a visit. We are releasing the Good E-Reader Magazine next month and could use your support. Visit our magazine link to see what stories we are going to cover and how you can subscribe (The Good E-Reader Magazine)
Amazon Lands a Lucrative Publishing deal – How the E-Book Paradigm is Changing
Posted by: Michael Kozlowski | Comments (5)Amazon has announced that they have struck a E-Book deal with Andrew Wylie, who is the head of an exclusive New York agency, whose clients include Salmon Rushdie, Oliver Sacks and Phillip Roth. Andrew also represents the estates of William S. Burroughs of the Beat Generation fame.
Amazon will be exclusively carrying the works of these authors in its E-Book Store, which caters to the Kindle line of E-Readers. This is a two prong effect, for one this deal cuts out the auhors paperback dealers out of the loop. It also puts Amazon ahead in the very competitive e-book store arena.
Exclusive deals like this is nothing new in the literary world of publishing and the E-Book world. As the e-book market heats up, there’s going to be some real competition for talent, and talent is going to start pushing for deals as well. Take James Patterson for example, who sells the most electronic books on Amazon. In a recent report in a three month period he has sold 800,000 E-Books. You can be sure that has authors like himself get better deals offered to them for royalties percentage, authors will begin to wield more bargaining power then they have had in the past.
Over the next few years we are likely to see a profound shift in famous Authors establishing exclusive relationships with dedicated E-Book Store. Are you a fan of Charlaine Harris? If you want her in e-book form, you need a Kindle.
This has the potential to be a rather harrowing endeavor for the average customer who wants to buy one e-reader and read books that have been assigned to another. Having book stores roping up exclusive deals, means you will likely have to purchase more than one device in order to read books in electronic form.
You can bet your bottom dollar that the major e-book stores such as Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Boarders, and Kobo are aware of this situation and might try to fight it with time sensitive exclusive deals. Maybe we will see a situation where exclusive deals on new novels are done with one major e-book store for the first few months, and then others get a chance to sell the book. Or, maybe we will see a sales based model, where the first 400,000 copies sold are with Amazon, and then the other stores get to market the book as well.
As the exclusive deals that Amazon has just struck mainly permeate in the digital world, it does have a profound effect on the paperback world. When Amazon made this deal, it was likely without the knowledge or consent of the distribution companies that print the books, store them in a warehouse and then ship them to various book stores accross the country. With no notice given to tangible book world, it will create an escalating crisis of profound proportion.
The E-Book vs the Novel War is just begining, and Amazon has just fired the first shot.