Sony Reader app hitting iPhone and Android devices in December

Playing catchup, are we? Sony’s hot on the trail of Amazon and Barnes and Noble, who already have e-reading apps for the Android and iOS platforms, with its own freshly announced Reader offering set for release next month. The functionality in this upcoming slice of software will be familiar: you get to access books already purchased at the Reader Store or pony up cash for new ones, while making bookmarks, notes and highlights on your mobile device. Throw in adjustable fonts and you’ve got your boilerplate beginning to a decent mobile e-reader. Now you just need to pick your fave ebook purveyor.

Sony Reader app hitting iPhone and Android devices in December originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Nov 2010 03:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Barnes and Noble Nook firmware version 1.5 now available

Barnes and Noble’s just made version 1.5 of its Nook e-reader’s firmware available. What can Nook owners expect from this latest upgrade? Well, the company says it boasts improved page refresh rates about 50 percent faster than the previous version — which is good news as we found it to be slower than its competitors. The update — which is available for both the 3G and WiFi versions — is also Barnes and Noble’s largest to date for the readers, and includes other fixes such as syncing across devices like the Nook’s various apps (finally!), customizable folders for your library, password protection options, improved search functions and battery performance. That sure does sound like a big update to us, so go get it if you’re a Nook user! Full press release is below.

Continue reading Barnes and Noble Nook firmware version 1.5 now available

Barnes and Noble Nook firmware version 1.5 now available originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 22 Nov 2010 17:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Pandigital’s 9-inch Novel now on sale… as a QVC exclusive

Those wily shoppers at QVC have beaten the world once again in securing an exclusive on Pandigital’s 9-inch Novel tablet. You’ll recall that we weren’t exactly overwhelmed with joy after handling the 7-inch Novel, and sadly this new slate looks like nothing more than a growth spurt, bringing as it does the same resistive touchscreen, B&N ebook store access, 2GB of integrated storage, and 802.11b/g WiFi highlights. Admittedly, QVC throws in a 4GB microSD card and prices it at an affordable $214, but we’re always wary of Android devices that neglect to state which version of the OS they’re running. Hit up the source link if you’re more courageous — or if you just want to watch the longest infomercial of your life.

Pandigital’s 9-inch Novel now on sale… as a QVC exclusive originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 22 Nov 2010 03:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Switched On: Getting from Kno to yes, part 2

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

The last Switched On introduced the opportunity of the Kno tablet, which is in transition from having a large hardware footprint to having a large customer footprint. Without question, the Kno hardware is an outlier, but could be simply a first salvo in a battle for digital textbooks that will take years to play out.

Look at the ironic development of e-readers. Today’s LCD-based Nook Color would not exist if Sony and Amazon had not opened (and soothed) consumers’ eyes with e-paper-based readers that were themselves an answer to an early generation of LCD-based products like the Rocket e-Book. The outlier shows the potential.

Continue reading Switched On: Getting from Kno to yes, part 2

Switched On: Getting from Kno to yes, part 2 originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 21 Nov 2010 17:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon introduces Kindle book gifting just in time for the holidays

It’s not the Kindle lending feature that Amazon has in the works, but the company has just rolled out another fairly big Kindle feature for those feeling a bit generous this holiday season. That comes in the form of a new “give as a gift” option now present on Amazon.com, which will let you send an e-book to anyone with an email address, who can then read it on the Kindle-friendly device of their choice (or an actual Kindle, of course). As Amazon is all too happy to point out, it’s the first major bookseller to offer such a service, but we’ve got to guess it won’t be the last.

Amazon introduces Kindle book gifting just in time for the holidays originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 19 Nov 2010 17:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Copia’s ‘social reading’ platform goes live, abandons hardware plans

We might be busy refilling our inkwells in preparation for CES 2011, but let’s not forget that some of the CES 2010 exhibitors are still working feverishly on bringing their innovations to market. Copia is one such company, though in the time between its January debut and today it’s had to abandon its plans for own-brand e-readers and has fully transitioned itself into a software offering — with apps available for the desktop, iPad, Windows Phone 7 now, and Android and other touch devices following soon. Copia allows Facebook Connect logins, which should give you a hit at its premise — it aims to meld an ebook store in with a vibrant and active online reading community, with a litany of social and sharing features making it perhaps more attractive than the somewhat more limited social skills on offer from the current ebook market leaders. Unannounced OEM partners have been engaged to deliver the Copia platform on upcoming e-reading devices, though whether the whole thing sinks or swims will be entirely up to you, the user. See a video demo of what Copia’s about after the break.

Continue reading Copia’s ‘social reading’ platform goes live, abandons hardware plans

Copia’s ‘social reading’ platform goes live, abandons hardware plans originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 19 Nov 2010 04:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Copia, Social Reading App/Network/Store, Comes Alive

Copia, the social reading platform unveiled at CES in early 2010, is live. It won’t be officially announced until next week, and it’s still rough around the edges. Call it a public beta, call it a release candidate; it’s finally ready for readers to see for themselves what it’s all about.

I’ve spent a lot of time with Copia’s private beta, which has gone through a handful of iterations building up to this release candidate. The idea behind it is great: Combine the social aspects of Facebook with the commercial aspect of the iTunes music store. But it’s very difficult to get all of those parts working well on their own, let alone working well together.

This video from Copia explains the philosophy very well:

To try to make this vision real, Copia’s platform has three parts:

  • a social-networking website, where you connect with friends and other readers of the same books to discuss what you’re reading, share recommendations and ratings. To make connecting a little easier, you can sign in with a Facebook account, or create a separate Copia account. Once you’re in, Copia can connect with LinkedIn and Twitter, too.
  • a desktop e-reading client for Mac and PC where you can buy books through the Copia store (EPUB with Adobe DRM, so you’ll need an Adobe account) and read those books on your desktop or laptop. You can also read PDFs or DRM-free EPUB files in the client.
  • An iPad app that like the desktop, includes both your e-book library and the store.

Originally, DMC Worldwide, Copia’s parent company, had planned to release a suite of multi-size e-readers in conjunction with Copia. Now, its plan is to expand its software platform to multiple devices, from the iPad to OEM partners.

So let me quickly walk you through the typical Copia experience. You get an account on the website and start connecting to friends. These can be one-sided or two-sided follows, like Twitter; so you could, if you wished (and users wanted to share) follow what a favorite author is reading or recommending.

You download one of the seven free books Copia’s made available to new members. Some of these are pretty good — hey, E. M. Forster’s A Passage to India! I don’t have an e-book copy of that. Now, even though you can buy or select it from the site, you can’t actually download it. You have to open up the desktop client for that.

So you download and install the desktop client and enter in your ID. Now you can download. Unfortunately, if you picked some books to add to your library that you didn’t actually buy from the site, weird things will happen when you try to double-click it. Basically, the app assumes you’re trying to download the book, can’t find it in your purchase list, and spits out an error message. OK.

When you open up the e-reader, it’s pretty typical stuff. There’s no full-screen view, and zoom in/zoom out doesn’t actually seem to zoom anything, but it does change your view from, say, one column to two. It handles annotations and notes that I can then beam up to the mothership in the website and keep synced across my devices — so long as I remember to press the big “Sync” button. It can’t auto-sync anything.

The iPad app offers probably the smoothest experience: You can browse, download and connect without much of a hitch. But again, you need to actively sync your content between the website and desktop client, and there’s a bit of a lag between syncing a book and it appearing on the iPad. If you’ve used iPad e-book applications like Nook or Kindle, there isn’t much here that’s new.

Copia actually turns out to be a really instructive case of why companies with great ideas and a clear vision don’t always end up shipping the best products. It’s not for lack of smart people, good design, or good code: It’s about control.

Copia doesn’t control any of the ends of book production or distribution. It has to deal with the book publishers, Adobe (who makes the DRM), the companies who make the devices, the App store who has to approve getting your software on a device (over which you have zero control of the date they finally approve an app for release). If you want to broaden your scope, to offer a wider range of formats on every device imaginable, that increases the complication by powers of ten. To try to make all of those partnerships cohere and still create a single, coherent platform without the established relationships or marketing clout to beat everyone into shape is nearly impossible.

E-reading is a particularly troublesome market to try to make a project like this work. Book publishers are if anything more conservative than their counterparts in the movie and music industries. They’ve been at this longer, and they’ve seen bad deals, failed formats, rampant piracy.

Book readers, too, are more conservative in their approach to these objects. They like simplicity. Amazon and Barnes & Noble have been the most successful in this space because they offer one store, one brand, one experience. Sony, for instance, makes great consumer hardware, including great e-readers — but haven’t been able to crack the consciousness in the way Amazon and Barnes & Noble have, because they aren’t associated with books.

In the year since Copia was announced, Amazon and Barnes & Noble responded to the problems that Copia sought to address and integrated their own however-limited social functions into their products. They’ve done it with partnerships with existing social networks: Twitter, Facebook and Google. The NOOKcolor is arguably just as social as Copia already, exactly because it allows readers to hook into these extended social networks and full list of Google contacts, and do it fairly seamlessly, right within the e-reader.

That’s the model both the content management companies and the social networks are pursuing, and it took them a long time to get there. Don’t dry to jam too much content into the social network: bring the social networking logins and profiles to where people are using their content.

Likewise, don’t spend most of your energy building social networking features into your content site. Let Netflix be Netflix and let Twitter be Twitter. No company should spend too much time and resources trying to do something it doesn’t have the skills to do better than anybody else.

Even Apple — the master of controlling an end-to-end solution — has had to discover this with Ping, and to a lesser extent with iBooks. Steve Jobs just isn’t all that interested in sharing things about himself on a social network, and he might love to read, but he’s not all that interested in the publishing industry. Steve Jobs likes The Beatles. Let him have The Beatles.

I’m sure that in iteration after iteration, Copia will take all of the services under its control and make them work seamlessly with each other. And the big thing that it will force e-readers and e-book companies to do is to think hard about how they want to integrate social components into their devices.

Will it just be tweeting, “Hey! I read this, check it out!” Will be an open standard, like the proposed OpenBookmarks framework, that allow readers to share their annotations and bookmarks with each other no matter what devices they’re using? Or will customers want richer connections — a space for virtual book groups, the ability to get to know strangers based on their shared affinities, browse their friend’s libraries, consider their purchase recommendations? Could Amazon, Barnes & Noble or Apple implement something like this? Would they want to?

As it is, Copia isn’t the future of reading, publishing, e-retail or anything else. (All of these claims have been made at various points leading up to its launch.) Right now, it’s two things:

  • a solid frontend client for Adobe Digital Editions;
  • a very good proof-of-concept for how far you the social-network model can be extended into social reading.

That is not bad. If you’re a reader, you should check it out; see what works, and see what doesn’t. If you’re involved in this business in some other capacity, see what you can use — or what another, hungrier company might use to try to take you down.

See Also:


Nook Color review

It’s hard to believe we’re already writing a review of the Nook Color, considering Barnes & Noble’s first foray into the e-reader world was revealed just over a year ago. In that time, the company has gone from no presence in e-books to owning 20 percent of the marketshare, and now has moved from a somewhat sluggish hybrid E-Ink / LCD device to a full color, tablet-like product. The Nook Color is definitely a major step forward, boasting a completely revamped, Android-based OS, and a big push into the children’s book and periodical market (particularly full color magazines). Both of these spaces have yet to be mined successfully by players like Apple and Amazon — and it’s clear Barnes & Noble is aware of the stakes. Beyond book reading, the Nook Color potentially offers a tablet alternative that can (or will be able to) do much of what is possible on an iPad or Galaxy Tab. In fact, the company plans to launch its own Android tablet app store in the first quarter of 2011, providing a consistent, compatible application experience that could get the jump on other Android tablet-makers’ plans (hello Samsung). Of course, this is a fierce market, and with a $249 price tag, Barnes & Noble has to play to win on every front. So, is the Nook Color the next logical step in e-readers? Is it a healthy alternative to more expensive tablets? And can it cement the prominent bookseller’s place in a hotly contested new space? Read on for all those answers in the full Engadget review!

Continue reading Nook Color review

Nook Color review originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Nov 2010 08:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nook Color now shipping to early birds, limited retail

The $249 Nook Color has decided its November 19th shipping date wasn’t soon enough so it’s jumped ahead of it with pre-order deliveries starting today. Barnes and Noble’s Nook-with-a-hook will be cheering those who reserved or pre-ordered it as shipping ramps up through this week, and there’ll even be some “very limited” quantities that you’ll be able to buy at retail locations like B&N, Best Buy, Walmart, and Books-A-Million stores. All of them should be getting live units for the curious to try out the Nook Color as well. As to the older, less chromatically able Nooks, B&N is promising a firmware update next week. Skip past the break for the full PR.

Continue reading Nook Color now shipping to early birds, limited retail

Nook Color now shipping to early birds, limited retail originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Nov 2010 08:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ASUS Eee Tablet to be renamed, will head to market in early 2011

You remember that ASUS Eee Tablet that was unveiled back at Computex in June, right? Of course you do, it looked like a pretty great e-reader / note-taking gadget, but oddly we haven’t heard a peep about it since. Obviously, the “tablet” with its 2,450 dpi touchscreen sensitivity and quick 0.1 second page turns missed its September release date, however, according to ASUS it’s still kicking and is being renamed — we hear Digital Note and Eee Note are potential choices. So, when will you finally be able to take notes on its 8-inch 1024 x 768 pixel panel? ASUS tells us that it will be demoed at CES and officially launched in the first quarter of 2011 — although, it may be available in Europe slightly earlier depending on local content partnerships. No confirmation on that “under $599” price we had heard whispers of, but here’s hoping we hear a bit more on this one before we touch down in Vegas.

ASUS Eee Tablet to be renamed, will head to market in early 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Nov 2010 16:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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