Report: Amazon building prototype hardware other than Kindle


The New York Times’ Bits blog is reporting that “people with direct knowledge” of Amazon’s plans say that Lab 126 — the division of the company which designed the Kindle — is currently looking into other hardware, i.e. devices that are not the Kindle. One unnamed source reports that such devices would be a “means to an end,” meant to enable easy purchasing of Amazon‘s content, which currently includes music, movies, and digital books. The source said that CEO Jeff Bezos’ intent for Lab 126 was initially to build multiple devices — including apparent discussions to enter the mobile phone market — but that the Kindle eventually became the main hardware focus. The report also notes that Amazon’s hardware division currently has about 80 job openings, which would lend credence to the idea that more devices could be on the way.

Report: Amazon building prototype hardware other than Kindle originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Aug 2010 16:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBits  | Email this | Comments

Amazon’s Kindle Store opens digital doors in UK

Amazon has just announced the launch of its UK Kindle Store, furnishing UK netizens with a localized storefront from which to browse and purchase their ebooks. It starts life with an imposing 400,000 book collection, and is claimed by Amazon to offer the lowest prices “of any e-bookstore in the UK.” Guess that gives price comparison sites a new avenue to branch out into. More than 170 magazines and newspapers are also available, for one-off purchases or on a subscription basis, while the new lighter, better, cheaper Kindle is up for pre-order and set to ship at the end of the month. Good to see that Amazon isn’t neglecting its extra-American markets.

Continue reading Amazon’s Kindle Store opens digital doors in UK

Amazon’s Kindle Store opens digital doors in UK originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Aug 2010 07:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Gizmodo  |  sourceUK Kindle Store  | Email this | Comments

Foxit eSlick E-Reader Nears its End

Smaller e-readers are dropping like flies as yet another device maker has announced it will get out of the e-reader hardware business.

Foxit has said it will “cease development” on its eSlick device that was once touted for being among the cheapest in the market and offering excellent support for PDF files. Instead it plans to offer its software to other digital books providers, says Foxit in a press release.

The death of the eSlick comes on the heels of similar news about devices from companies such as Audiovox and Plastic Logic. Price cuts by Amazon and Barnes & Noble, extreme competition and a shift in consumer interest toward more multi-purpose tablets have taken their toll on e-readers.

In contrast, Amazon’s newly revamped Kindle sold out in just days after its launch a week ago.

Since Amazon introduced the first generation Kindle in 2007, e-readers became one of the hottest consumer products. The category attracted more than a dozen companies, all of whom bought a black-and-white screen from E Ink, packaged it into a plastic casing and competed for consumer attention.

Mostly Kindle clones, many of these e-readers were near-identical in how they looked and the features they offered. Smaller e-reader makers also had to contend with Apple’s iPad, which launched in April. The iPad took away some consumers who were looking for features beyond just the ability to read digital books.

Meanwhile, Amazon stormed into a price war dropping the price of the Kindle 2 to $190 from $260 in response to cuts from Barnes & Noble on its Nook e-reader. A latest version of the Kindle with only Wi-Fi capability costs $140, now $10 cheaper than a similar Nook version.

This price war took its toll on smaller e-reader manufacturers. Foxit, which once claimed to have among the cheapest e-reader in the market, has now been left behind. It’s e-book reader with a 6-inch black-and-white E Ink display now costs $200.

For a small company like Foxit clearly cutting price on the eSlick to beat the Kindle is not a sustainable. Not surprisingly, Foxit says it will now focus on licensing its PDF and ePub technology to companies in the e-book market. As e-book sales grow, it is becoming clear that the e-reader category will have just three major brands: Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Sony, and a rival to take them all on: the Apple iPad.

See Also:

Photo: Foxit eSlick (knuton/Flickr)


New Kindle comes with microphone, seeds of possibility

Amazon’s new Kindle has plenty of desirable features — like a month-long battery, double the storage and a more responsive screen — but some exciting new additions weren’t highlighted on the press release. Diving through the official User’s Guide for just such unheralded items, the Kindle World Blog discovered the unit will come with a second English dictionary, a PDF contrast adjustment and… a microphone. As you can see immediately above, that last won’t be accessible out of the box — and may just lead to audio annotations down the road — but the hacker community (or more legitimately, Kindle developers) could do very interesting things with the discovery. We hesitate to even mention for fear the feature will get pulled, but we’re dreaming of Skyping across that free 3G connection already.

New Kindle comes with microphone, seeds of possibility originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Aug 2010 19:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Wired, TeleRead  |  sourceA Kindle World Blog  | Email this | Comments

Why Does the New Kindle Have A Microphone?

At this point, you probably know a lot about the new Kindle. But it’s this little hardware addition on the underside of the device that’s caught our attention:

What’s that in the middle? Why, yes — it’s a microphone!

According to the new Kindle User’s Guide, “the microphone is not currently enabled but is provided for future use.“ Some folks think it’s for voice navigation, which could give Kindle a major accessibility advantage over its competitors. (E-readers and tablets still remain way behind PCs on this front.) David Rothman thinks Amazon/AT&T might stick a phone in there, which seems pretty unlikely given how intent Bezos and Amazon seem on refining the reading experience rather than competing with Apple and general-purpose tablets on all things multimedia.

But voice annotations and memos don’t seem too far-fetched; and if the apps developed using the Kindle Development Kit get off the ground sometime soon, I suppose the more hardware goodies third-parties have to play with, the better.

Andrys Basten identified the microphone in a short roundup at TeleRead, “Unheralded new features in the Kindle 3,” focusing on subtle but sharp software tweaks. For instance, the web browser now has an “article view” mode, similar to the new Reader function in Safari or the popular iOS app Instapaper.

Likewise, PDF reading has been improved: the viewer now lets you highlight and copy-and-paste text, and adjust the contrast for better readability (a major problem in the past for scanned/photocopied docs). There are even workarounds for avoiding document delivery charges over 3G, by either syncing with your computer or sending your documents to an email address that waits until you’re in wi-fi to send them along. Saving bandwidth is saving money, especially if you’re not using it to buy something from Amazon.

All this points to Amazon trying to strengthen and reposition the Kindle as a general text document reader, not just a portal for e-books. And it makes it pretty unlikely that Amazon/Sprint would just drop a whole new data stream in there, even if they could try to introduce a new monthly fee — something that could make Kindle users, having been promised free 3G for the life of their devices, to totally lose it.

Photo credit: Amazon.com


Amazon’s third-generation Kindle ‘temporarily sold out,’ bookworms curse the universe

Gone so soon, Kindle? Due to what we can only assume is unprecedented demand or a terrible shortfall in supply, Amazon’s third-generation Kindle (you know, the one with 3G and WiFi) is already sold out. Just days after being pushed into the world, the $189 e-reader is now hoisting a “temporarily sold out” sign, with Bezos and Company urging prospective consumers to place their order now in order to “reserve a place in line.” So, what’ll it be? Reserve now, or throw a temper tantrum? Tough call, we know.

[Thanks, Philip]

Amazon’s third-generation Kindle ‘temporarily sold out,’ bookworms curse the universe originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Aug 2010 11:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Sony refuses to get caught up in a price war with Kindle, intends to compete on quality

Boy, Sony sure loves to drag its heels when it comes to obvious industry trends. First netbooks were “a race to the bottom,” now the company’s saying it “won’t sacrifice the quality and design” of its e-readers in order to lay claim to being the cheapest. This comes as a reaction to the Kindle’s aggressive new $139 entry price point and continues Sony’s reluctance to fiddle with what it sees as a successful formula. We’re not going to second-guess the reasoning (too much), but it’s not like there’s that much room to differentiate yourself when you’re using the same E Ink tech as the competition, is there? Guess if all else fails, Sony can always innovate the hell out of those leatherette cases and bundle them with the Reader.

Sony refuses to get caught up in a price war with Kindle, intends to compete on quality originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Jul 2010 04:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceForbes  | Email this | Comments

Amazon sees e-book sales surpassing paper versions, has Mirasol technology in the Kindle labs

Following the launch of Amazon’s third-generation Kindle, company CEO Jeff Bezos sat down to discuss the e-reader business with USA Today. We’d recommend giving the whole piece a look-see if you just can’t get enough Kindle in your life, but a few choice quotes caught our attention. For starters, Bezos predicted that Kindle e-book sales will “surpass paperback sales sometime in the next 9 to 12 months,” and that “sometime after that, we’ll surpass the combination of paperback and hardcover.” Considering that the Kindle platform is but 33 months old, and that books are just a wee bit older, that’s pretty impressive. In a separate sit-down with Pocket-lint, Steve Kessel — Amazon’s senior vice president of Worldwide Digital Media — teased us all with regard to a color version of the company’s famed e-reader. ‘Course, we’ve known that Bezos and Company aren’t too hopeful about such a thing in the near-term, but we’ve yet to actually hear the company confess to having specific color alternatives in the lab. If you’ll recall, we found Qualcomm’s Mirasol demonstration worthy of laud back at CES, and according to Kessel, “that’s in the lab.” We’re also told that a slew of other color options are always in testing, though, so we’re doing our darnedest to not get those hopes too high. It ain’t working, but still…

Amazon sees e-book sales surpassing paper versions, has Mirasol technology in the Kindle labs originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Jul 2010 09:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink All Things D  |  sourcePocket-lint, USA Today  | Email this | Comments

New Kindles now available for pre-order

You might’ve heard about a new Kindle model or two this evening, and good news if they tickled your fancy — they’re now on Amazon and available for pre-order. Both the WiFi-only and WiFi / 3G models are shipping August 27th, the former in graphite and the latter in graphite and white options. Search your pocketbook, if you know it to be coveted.

P.S. – UK customers, try here.

New Kindles now available for pre-order originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Jul 2010 23:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAmazon (WiFi), (WiFi + 3G)  | Email this | Comments

Amazon Strikes Back at the iPad With New, $140 Kindle

Jeff Bezos has survived the iPad.

Predictions that Apple’s bright tablet computer would be a Kindle-killer haven’t quite come to pass: Amazon CEO Bezos says that the growth rate in sales of his e-reading device has tripled since June, when he dropped the Kindle price to $189. (Clearly increased competition from other e-readers, like Sony Reader and the Barnes and Noble Nook, hasn’t dampened the Kindle fire, either.) And he’s still kvelling over last week’s announcement that e-book sales on Amazon exceed the number of hardback books sold by the e-commerce site. “And that’s with a device at the end of its product life cycle,” he says.

The cycle of life resets on Aug. 27, when Amazon will ship the third-generation Kindle. Judging from a brief hands-on demo, the new Kindle — which still costs $189 — isn’t a drastic makeover but a canny evolution that enhances the device’s raison d’etre: reading.

But by also releasing a lower-cost ($139) version of the Kindle without 3G wireless connectivity, Bezos anticipates millions of new customers who can live with waiting for a Wi-Fi hot spot to replenish their content. He says that the introduction of the Wi-Fi version is purely a price play, a way to sell Kindles to families and couples who already have one in the house.

“At $139, you’re going to have multiple Kindles, not just one,” Bezos says.

Consistent with Amazon’s past practice, Bezos revealed no specifics about Kindle sales to date, other than to say that “millions” have already been sold.

This year’s Kindle comes in either the classic ivory or an earthier graphite hue. The most significant improvement — perhaps as a “sez you” to the crisp iPad screen — is a sharper e-ink display than previous Kindles. Bezos claims that the contrast is 50 percent better, due in part to a proprietary technology involving “font hinting” which more skillfully manipulates the electronic ink that forms the letters.

Also, as Apple’s CEO has been known to say, “It’s really thin!” The new Kindle is a svelte 1/3 of an inch thick and weighs 8.7 ounces, making it 21 percent smaller than the 2G Kindle. This makes Kindle lighter than a paperback, while the iPad is heavier than Infinite Jest. (Eventually, Bezos says, he’d like to make the Kindle so light “you’d need a paperweight to hold it down.”)

“Our best estimate is that Kindle books will outsell paperbacks sometime in the next nine to 12 months.” — Jeff Bezos

The pages turn 20 percent faster than on the previous Kindle, and Amazon has even tamped down the clicking sound of the buttons, so readers are less likely to disturb a slumbering companion. Those page-turning buttons, by the way, are longer and slimmer — almost like bumpers on the edge of the device. This may be the first Kindle that finally prevents you from turning a page by mistake.

The long-anticipated Kindle touchscreen is … still not there. “From an engineering point of view, it would have been very easy to put a touchscreen on it,” says Bezos. “But it would hurt the reading experience.” He says that e-ink touchscreens degrade display quality and add glare. Instead, the Kindle revamps its interface by replacing its stubby joystick with a “five way” arrangement where a thumbnail-sized selection button is surrounded by a thin band of compass-point directional buttons. The home and the menu button are now placed on the keyboard array. Maybe third time’s the charm for the Kindle, which has changed navigational controls on each version.

Other improvements include expanded battery life: a full month if the radio’s off, and 10 days if you leave the 3G turned on. There’s twice as much storage, enough for 3,500 books. And though Bezos didn’t show it to me, Amazon is offering a cover with a built-in LED reading light that works off the device’s battery. It’s $60, which seems pricey for a book light, but Amazon explains that it uses gold-plated conducive hinges. Maybe when you’re done reading you can use it as jewelry.

“We’re starting to see evidence that at the $189 price point that this may be a mass product,” Bezos says. “Even though we’re designing it for readers, it seems to be breaking out.” With a Kindle now selling at $139, he expects the tipping point to tip even more.

What’s more, the revelation that Amazon sells more Kindle books than hardcovers is only the beginning of what now looks like an inevitable mass migration to e-books.

“Our best estimate is that Kindle books will outsell paperbacks at Amazon sometime in the next nine to twelve months,” Bezos says. “And then at some point after that they’ll overtake the combination.”

As for the iPad? Bezos is a fan. “My first thought when I saw the iPad is that it will be great for our mobile commerce business — the more internet-connected devices the better, from Amazon’s point of view.” But if people thought the iPad would be a challenger to Kindle’s e-reading throne, “it hasn’t happened that way,” says Bezos with his trademark laugh. He tried reading a bit on an iPad but didn’t get far because “if I have to read a long document on an LCD display, the first thing I do is print it out.”

He thinks that people will be fine with carrying multiple devices — tablet, laptop and, of course, “purpose-built reading devices that are extremely light, let you read outside in bright daylight, a whole bunch of things.” Like the one he’s now selling for $139.