Nook begins shipping, in select Barnes & Noble stores on December 7th

If you missed getting in your Nook pre-order there’s still hope to nab the dual-display Barnes & Noble reader in time for the holidays. A Wall Street Journal piece says that Nook will be “available for sale or for demonstration purposes” in select, high-volume B&N stores starting December 7th — a week later than expected as B&N tries to fulfill unexpectedly high consumer demand following the ereader’s October 20th announcement. Of course, it’s impossible to say if the sell-out translates to high sales or just poor planning on B&N’s part as it dips a tentative toe into the fickle waters of consumer electronics. Nevertheless, anyone who ordered before November 20th will still receive theirs for Christmas while everyone else will receive theirs on January 4th as we already heard. Now if only Barnes & Noble would clarify what it means by “high-volume stores” we could plan our road-trips accordingly.

[Thanks, Arthur]

Nook begins shipping, in select Barnes & Noble stores on December 7th originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 Nov 2009 03:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony’s 3G-enabled Reader Daily Edition up for pre-order, content deals coming next month

Amazon and Barnes & Noble may be swiping the limelight, but Sony’s clearly playing for keeps with its $399 Reader Daily Edition. The 7-inch e-book reader has just been listed for pre-order over at SonyStyle, and with it will come wireless access (via AT&T) to the company’s own eBookstore. We’re told that the company will “announce newspaper and magazine content providers within the next month,” and of course, no monthly fees will be tacked on from browsing and buying books. If plans stay on track, we should see the first shipments leave next month — so, is Santa treating you with one, or what?

Update: Looks like not everyone will snatch one of these before that fateful day in December, so we’d suggest either settling on a Kindle / Nook or preparing your wallet to deal with ‘Tickle Me Elmo’ levels of eBay insanity.

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Sony’s 3G-enabled Reader Daily Edition up for pre-order, content deals coming next month originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 Nov 2009 09:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nook for sale at Barnes & Noble stores on November 30th?

If you’re looking to pre-order a Nook today you’ll be greeted with a December 18th ship date from Barnes & Noble’s on-line store. However, if you stop by your Barnes & Noble on November 30th, you might find the Android-based dual-screen ereader in stock and ready to take home for $259 plus the usual government tithe. This according to a B&N spokeswoman who told Computerworld that units will be for sale in stores on the 30th. Whether than means all 774 retail outlets or just the majors is still unclear but hey, at least you’ve got options.

[Via I4U News]

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Nook for sale at Barnes & Noble stores on November 30th? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Nov 2009 06:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BoEye MID700 unveiled with Android OS, vaguely familiar form factor

BoEye — a company we’ve seen from time to time in the eBook reader space — has been recently spotted at Dubai’s GITEX with its own take on the Android MID. Aside from some obvious (and, quite frankly, tedious) comparisons to the mythical Apple Tablet, we don’t have too much to report: some excessively iPhone-esque features, including silver bevel, capacitive glass touchschreen, and that familiar solitary button on the bottom of the screen; a front-facing webcam; and, of course, that open source OS you crave. If you ask us, our favorite part of the affair is the rumored sub-$300 price tag — makes this one well worth keeping an eye on, at any rate. One more pic after the break.

[Via Red Ferret]

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BoEye MID700 unveiled with Android OS, vaguely familiar form factor originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Nov 2009 16:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dual-screen enTourage eDGe ebook reader gets a little hands-on time

We’re still reserving our doubts about the viability of the enTourage eDGe — after all, at $490 you can buy yourself a respectable netbook and a halfway decent ereader for the appropriate occasion — but we won’t say that we’re not interested. Just under a month after it hit the scene, the dual-screen device has landed (in prototype form) over at Gearlog, and while some of the features weren’t functional, the physical build shouldn’t change much when it goes final. At first glance, the whole thing just looks a bit dated, but then again, we’ve still got the ultra-fresh Nook on the brain. Hit the read link to have a look yourself, won’t you?

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Dual-screen enTourage eDGe ebook reader gets a little hands-on time originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Nov 2009 14:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kindle for PC app out now, Mac version to soon follow

Amazon has just expanded the potential audience for its ebook format by a few orders of magnitude with the Beta release of its free Kindle for PC application. Doing exactly what it says on the (imaginary) tin, this will allow you to read the locked-down Kindle format on your Windows weapon of choice, though Mac users are left with merely the “coming soon” message you see above. Given that you’ll now be able to consume Amazon’s ebooks on your PC and iPhone, there’s a risk that people might entirely sidestep the Kindle and Kindle DX for more familiar hardware, but clearly the company is willing to undertake it in order to get its wares out to a wider client base. We still think Amazon should do away with the proprietary madness and utilize a common standard like ePUB, but until then we can at least appreciate being given the ability to sync our Robinson Crusoe read across a few more devices than before.

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Kindle for PC app out now, Mac version to soon follow originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Nov 2009 05:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dulin’s Books rolls out PocketBook 360, 301+ ereaders in the US

Upstart company you’ve never heard of suddenly selling not one but two ebook readers in the US? Yeah, these are rebadge jobs, but at least one of ’em — the PocketBook 360 — is a slightly new variation on a theme. From the looks of it, this one is a new / different version of an ereader most recently seen under the Mentor brand, and packs a 5-inch Vizplex display, 512MB of internal memory, a microSD card slot for expansion, a Linux-based OS, your choice of black or white color options and, of course, support for a full range of ebook formats (including EPUB). The company’s PocketBook 301+, on the other hand, is seemingly the same model seen as the Foxit eSlick and Hyper Gear ereader, and includes the same EPUB support, along with a slightly larger 6-inch Vizplex display, and some expanded media playback and game options. Look for it to set you back $275, while the PocketBook 360 runs $240. If neither of those suit you, an additional, stylus-equipped Boox model is also promised “soon” — and, of course, is mighty familiar.

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Dulin’s Books rolls out PocketBook 360, 301+ ereaders in the US originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Nov 2009 13:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Foxit’s eSlick ereader now supports EPUB, puts Kindle to shame

Foxit’s eSlick isn’t exactly the most exciting ereader of all time, but now things have changed slightly with the addition of EPUB support, making this $259.99 device a more affordable (although less pretty) alternative to the Sony Reader, and a more flexible option than the Kindle. We looked around and have yet to spot the new firmware’s download link, but chances are devices shipped this month will come preloaded with the new code. Still, Barnes & Noble’s identical price tag will easily overshadow this in a few weeks — hello Nook, goodbye eSlick.

[Via Gearlog]

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Foxit’s eSlick ereader now supports EPUB, puts Kindle to shame originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Nov 2009 00:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sungale’s 7-inch Cyberus ID700WTA is neither a PMP nor an ereader, really

Sungale isn’t exactly the biggest, most well-known name in consumer electronics, but it’s sure trying to make a run with the big boys. A few months after introducing its own WiFi digiframe, the company is hitting back with a hybrid ereader / PMP device that just seems to be caught somewhere in the middle. Boasting a 7-inch color LCD display (800 x 480), the Cyberus ID700WTA can handle most popular multimedia and ebook formats — from PDF to DivX, it’s (pretty much) all covered. It also touts integrated WiFi, support for streaming media from a home network and a built-in clock / calender. There’s also the ability to fetch “online news, weather reports, stock prices and charts, maps and traffic routes, YouTube clips, internet radio, Picasa and Gmail,” so we’re going out on a limb here and suggesting that some sort of web browser or cadre of inbuilt apps are also included. It’s available now around the web for $279, and yes, that snazzy leather case is bundled in.

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Sungale’s 7-inch Cyberus ID700WTA is neither a PMP nor an ereader, really originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Nov 2009 09:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Spring Design vs. Barnes & Noble: all the nooks and crannies

So we followed up with Spring Design to figure out what exactly its relationship with Barnes & Noble had been during the development of the Nook and why the company was suing, and, well, it’s looking like B&N played some dirty pool here. You’re looking at the actual NDA signed by Barnes & Noble and Spring Design, wherein each party agreed to keep their secrets… secret. After signing the agreement, Spring Design showed the Alex dual-screen ebook reader and associated marketing materials to B&N execs all the way up B&N CFO Kevin Frain and B&N.com president William Lynch, who said he was “looking forward” to a partnership. Soon after that, Spring implies that all contact stopped until Barnes & Noble announced the Nook. Lawsuit time!

Here’s where it gets tricky, though — the NDA contains pretty standard language specifically allowing both B&N and Spring Design to walk away from each other and develop competing products, so long as they don’t use any of the confidential information they learned under NDA. Without knowing exactly what Spring Design showed to B&N and how much of that influenced or is included in the Nook (which Barnes & Noble currently won’t let anyone touch), we can’t say much about how this one’s going to play out, but for right now we’re looking at a huge corporation bringing out an Android-based ebook reader with dual electronic paper and touchscreen LCD displays just months after being shown the same concept by a three-year-old startup, and that’s not exactly a warm and fuzzy bedtime story. We’ll see what happens next — Barnes & Noble, you have anything to say?

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Spring Design vs. Barnes & Noble: all the nooks and crannies originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 03 Nov 2009 18:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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