Barnes & Noble partners with Plastic Logic, becomes “exclusive eBookstore provider” for its e-reader

It’s not exactly an e-book reader of its own as previously rumored, but Barnes & Noble’s announced an alliance with Plastic Logic in which it’ll serve as the “exclusive eBookstore provider” to the long-in-development e-reader, which unless we’re playing with semantics here means any and all digital literature you’re wanting to purchase on-device will have to come from BN. According to the press release, downloads from Google’s public domain archives will also be made available gratis, and as for the enigmatic 8.5 x 11-inch slate, it’s still reportedly on track for an early 2010 launch. Much in the vein of Amazon’s more recent maneuvers, the ole’ brick-and-mortar retailer is taking what it’s calling a device-agnostic approach, with apps already available for iPhone and iPod touch, Blackberry, Windows, and OS X. Practice your reading skills with the presser after the break.

Update: A few added details from Barnes & Noble’s conference call. The company says it’ll be announcing support for other products in the future (not Kindle or Sony e-reader) and that it has no announcements at this point as to whether it’ll be selling Plastic Logic e-readers in store, exclusive or otherwise.

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Barnes & Noble partners with Plastic Logic, becomes “exclusive eBookstore provider” for its e-reader originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Jul 2009 17:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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