Kobo Arc review: another 7-inch Android tablet steps into the ring

Kobo Arc review: another 7-inch Android tablet steps into the ring

Perhaps there’s something to be said for setting the bar low — at the very least, it leaves you with ample room to shine in the next round. That’s where Kobo, the Canadian-turned-Japanese company, was when the Arc ($200 and up) landed on our desk, and we’ll tell you right now that the 7-inch tablet mops the floor with its predecessor. In the time since that device was released, however, the rest of the budget tablet market has stepped up its game, with Google’s Nexus 7, Amazon’s Kindle Fire HD and Barnes & Noble’s Nook HD running neck and neck. Has Kobo sufficiently cleared the bar this time out? You’re gonna have to click on through for the answer to that one.

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Pearson buys a small stake in Nook Media, wants a fast track for digital education

Pearson buys a small stake in Nook Media, wants a fast track for educational ebooks

Publishers often want to work closely with e-book outlets — possibly a little too closely — but it’s rare that they involve themselves directly. Pearson is taking that uncommon step by making a 5 percent, $89.5 million investment in Nook Media, the joint venture between Barnes & Noble and Microsoft. Some of the reasoning won’t be made public until Barnes & Noble provides holiday sales results on January 3rd, but Pearson is clear that it’s furthering its online education plans: it wants Nook Media’s distribution skills to make a “seamless and effective experience for students.” Just when we’ll see this harmony is still up in the air, though. Nook Media has yet to outline what Microsoft’s partnership means for e-books and e-readers, let alone how Pearson factors in. We’re not expecting a sea change until companies start speaking up.

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Source: PaidContent

2012 Year in tech: A timeline

DNP 2012 Year in tech A Timeline

By Billy Steele, Sarah Silbert and Christopher Trout
Illustration By ILoveDust

While planet Earth has yet to meet its demise, the end of 2012 is nigh. It was a year of lengthy legal battles and shifting power dynamics in the tech industry. It brought with it great advancements and great failures — and, for some, the promise of the end of days. We’ve combed our archives to bring you just a few of the stories that made the biggest impact on our reporting this year. Herewith, an abridged look back at the year that was.

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Pearson to invest $89.5m in Barnes & Noble NOOK business

Barnes & Noble announced today that Pearson, a British publisher and education company, will be investing $89.5 million in Barnes & Noble‘s NOOK business for a 5% stake, valuing the business at $1.79 billion, which is up from $1.7 billion earlier this spring. Barnes & Noble will own 78.2% of its NOOK business after this is all said and done.

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Microsoft invested $300 million in NOOK earlier this year, and they own 16.8% of the business, and while Pearson will only own 5% at this point, they’re thinking about purchasing another 5% sometime in the future. The value of the NOOK business remains more than double the market capitalization of Barnes & Noble, and shares of the company jumped 10% to $15.83 in premarket trading.

According to Barnes & Noble, Pearson’s investment in NOOK Media will essentially pair up Pearson’s leading expertise in online learning with Barnes & Noble’s expertise in online distribution and customer service. The company says this will “facilitate improved discovery of available digital content and services, as well as seamless access.”

Barnes & Noble said that its e-reader business would fall short of projections for the year and that holiday sales overall would be below expectations. The NOOK has been trying to challenge Amazon‘s dominance of the e-book market, and this latest investment gives the business backing from one of the world’s largest education companies, as well as the publisher of The Financial Times newspaper.


Pearson to invest $89.5m in Barnes & Noble NOOK business is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Pew Research and NPD suggest tablets replacing e-readers and traditional print

According to NPD analyst Stephen Baker, it’s “the beginning of the end” for traditional e-readers, and according to Pew Research’s most recent findings, it’s full-color tablets that are replacing the segment – with traditional print dying out as well. According to Pew’s newest survey, 23% of Americans ages 16 and older say they’ve read a real e-book over the past 12 months, this number jumping 16% compared to last year. This number becomes especially significant given their finding that number of people (16 and up) that read a printed book in the same amount of time fell 5% year-over-year.

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Only 67% of the respondents questioned in this most recent survey by Pew said they’d read a real book (paper, print, that is) in the past 12 months. Take the number of Americans 16 and older that own a tablet, according to Pew, and you’ll see a possible reason why paper books are getting less popular: 25% – one in four! This number rose a whopping 10% from the same period of time surveyed in 2011.

Pew also showed that the number of respondents who said they owned an e-book reader (aka an e-reader, of course), rose from 10% to 19% this year compared to last. This tells us that though e-readers aren’t gaining popularity as well as the full tablet, they’re still on the up-and-up. Perhaps Stephen Baker is wrong?

“We are still in the early stages of the transition. It’s a big deal for the publishing industry, in the same way that the transition to digital news was a big deal for the newspaper business in the late ’90, and the same way Napster was a big deal to the music industry in the early 2000s.” – Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet Project

NPD also reports that they’ve estimated 33 million tablet computers have been sold “through November 2012″. NPD’s Baker assures the world that devices with displays smaller than 8 inches seem well suited to reading. But you be the judge: what do you think is about to happen over the next few years with e-reading in general? Will any one media be cut out entirely?

Pew’s survey is based on 2,252 Americans age 16 and older from Oct. 15 to Nov. 10 in 2012 in this case, just so you’re aware. They’ve also come to the conclusion that those that have a college degree, lived in a household with more than $75,000 in earnings, and were aged from 30 to 49 were most likely to have read an e-book. Sound about right to you?

[via LA Times]


Pew Research and NPD suggest tablets replacing e-readers and traditional print is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Amazon Kindle bookstore reaches Canada, cuts Americans (partly) out of the loop

Amazon Kindle ebookstore reaches Canada, cuts Americans partly out of the loop

Canadians have had to be content with a form of Kindle Store limbo until now. They could buy Kindle e-books, but they’ve had to rely on a US-centric portal that scarcely acknowledges their literary tradition. As of this weekend, they don’t have to cross the virtual border: Amazon Canada now has its own dedicated Kindle book section, with prices in local currency and the highlights on local writers like Margaret Atwood. Customers just have shop the newly opened store to make the switch. We wouldn’t call it true parity with the US when Canucks still can’t officially buy some Amazon hardware, like the Kindle Fire HD or Kindle Paperwhite. Nonetheless, it’s nice to know they’ll be treated as first-class customers when shopping for a copy of Alias Grace.

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Source: Amazon

Barnes & Noble drops Nook Simple Touch price to $79 for some unilluminated holiday reading

Good news for those looking to give the gift that keeps on refreshing every six pages or so: Barnes & Noble’s hitting its holiday stride by shaving a good $20 off the current price of its last-gen e-reader, down to $79. A price, the company helpfully points out, that comes *ahem* “without distracting ads.” The discount goes into effect tomorrow — the privilege of glowing while reading, meanwhile, will still cost you $119.

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FCC tells FAA to ‘boost US competitiveness,’ allow greater use of in-flight devices

FCC tells FAA to 'boost US competitiveness,' allow greater use of inflight devices

The nation’s top wireless dog has told the Federal Aviation Administration’s head that it should “enable greater use of tablets, e-readers, and other portable devices” during flights, according to the Hill. That was the gist of a missive sent from Julius Genachowski, chairman of the FCC to the FAA’s chief, Michael Huerta yesterday. He went on to say that doing so would let individuals “stay informed and connected with friends and family,” while helping large and small businesses be more productive, which would “boost US competitiveness.” While it sounds like not doing so would be un-patriotic with a pitch like that, the FAA has already formed a committee to revisit its current portable electronics policies and hasn’t arrived at any decisions yet — safety first, after all.

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Via: CNET

Source: The Hill

Amazon and Google shower content love on Brazil

Amazon and Google start selling ebooks in Brazil

Through the magic of pure coincidence (or not), Amazon and Google have spontaneously started offering e-books in the land of Brazil. In addition, Amazon has also introduced its Kindle e-reader to the region (available over “the next few weeks”) for the equivalent of $145. The Next Web notes that Amazon’s move comes after it successfully gained control of the desired domain name from a local company, and also after it poached Apple’s Brazilian director to head its own operations there. Meanwhile, Mountain View’s Brazilian incursion lacks political shenanigans, but adds movie rentals and purchases. If you’re in the area, head to the source links to bookmark something unputdownable.

[Thanks, Felipe]

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Via: The Next Web, Android Police

Source: Amazon Brazil, Google Play

Polymer Vision reportedly shut down, along with its dream of rollable e-ink displays

Wistron reportedly closes Polymer Vision, ends an era of rollable displays

The saga of Polymer Vision has been defined by optimistic plans braced by second chances when financial reality came crashing in, with no happily ever after or definite end in sight. Unfortunately, there may not be much more of a story to tell. CTO Edzer Huitema claims that Wistron has shut down Polymer Vision entirely: while it’s keeping the intellectual property behind the rollable display company it acquired in 2009, it has reportedly dismissed all associated staff after unsuccessful attempts to find a buyer. We’ve asked Wistron for a more formal confirmation and an explanation, and we’ll let you know if there’s an update. However, it’s possible that Polymer Vision’s technology was simply past its prime. As +Plastic Electronics notes, Polymer Vision and the Readius came at a time before mobile tablets and giant smartphones, when it wasn’t clear that we would tolerate big screens in our pockets; while flexible displays are still in development, some of Polymer Vision’s biggest advantages have faded away.

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Via: The Digital Reader

Source: +Plastic Electronics