DJ Hero spinning a $120 price tag, October 27th ship date?

While far from being a confirmation, major online retailers Gamestop and Amazon have independently of one another put up listings for the DJ Hero / turntable bundle with the same October 27th ship date and $119.99 price tag for Wii, PlayStation 3, and Xbox 360 owners — the PS2 version is either the same price or $20 cheaper, depending on which site you trust. That’s a good $70 less than the two-instrument Guitar Hero World Tour package, but of course you’re paying for a more single-player setup. Again, we haven’t heard word one from Activision, and with over four months until this supposed date, things are likely subject to change (assuming these even came from the publisher in the first place, and weren’t just magically pulled out of a large, black cap with frilly edges). We wouldn’t be surprised to see this being the final price, though, and either way, it serves as a nagging reminder that the life of a fake plastic musician doesn’t come cheap.

[Via Joystiq]

Read
– Gamestop listing
Read – Amazon listing

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DJ Hero spinning a $120 price tag, October 27th ship date? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Jun 2009 21:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bezos suggests Kindle books will appear on more devices, compete with Kindle readers

Amazon already sent a pretty clear signal that it has grander plans for Kindle than just its own devices when it launched its iPhone app earlier this year, but Jeff Bezos has now made those intentions clearer than ever, and dropped a few hints of things to come. Speaking at a Wired-sponsored conference yesterday, Bezos all but confirmed that Amazon sees Kindle books and Kindle readers as two separate businesses, and he even went so far as to say that “we are going to give the device team competition” by making Kindle books available on “mobile devices and other computing devices, although he obviously didn’t specify other e-book readers. Interestingly, Bezos also confirmed that Amazon had considered selling the Kindle with a monthly subscription plan to lower the cost, or require a minimum number of books purchased, but said that he preferred the simplicity of providing one flat up-front cost, which he says has helped account for the Kindle’s success.

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Bezos suggests Kindle books will appear on more devices, compete with Kindle readers originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Jun 2009 13:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bezos: Amazon Weighed Kindle Subscription Plan

kindle DX.jpg

Amazon chief executive Jeff Bezos on Monday defended the high price of the company’s new widescreen Kindle e-book reader, and insisted that it does not need more functionality in order to be more attractive to consumers.

Bezos also acknowledged that Amazon considered a cell phone-like plan for the Kindle.

“It’s a myth that multi-purpose devices are always better,” Bezos said at the Wired Business Conference in New York. “I don’t want to read a novel on a mobile phone – the screen display technology is difficult for reading over long periods of time.”

Humans like to do what’s easy, and buying books in 60 seconds fits that bill, he said.

The new Kindle DX, which was introduced last month, boasts a 9.7-inch screen, but also carries a $489 price tag.

That, Bezos insisted, is an “unbelievably low price” for a device that has an internal computer, a display, and a 3G wireless radio.

The only other devices that have that functionality are smartphones, and they are heavily subsidized, he said. Without the subsidies, they too would be close to $500.

“We are being very aggressive with pricing,” Bezos said.

Amazon considered a cell phone pricing plan that would either lock users into a $60/month data plan or require them to buy a certain number of books per month, but Bezos said he preferred to just “tell people the actual cost of the device.”

Get the rest of this story on pcmag.com.

Gadget Lab Podcast #78: iPhone 3GS

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In this week’s edition of the Gadget Lab podcast, Priya Ganapati and I discuss the climactic outcome of Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference. The company’s major announcement was the iPhone 3GS — the highly anticipated third-generation iPhone, whose performance is reportedly two times faster than the iPhone 3G. We also highlight substantial price cuts for the MacBook family and what they mean for Apple.

In lighter news, the Palm Pre hit stores Saturday, and Priya summarizes consumer response to the smartphone. Incidentally, Amazon released its large-format Kindle DX reader on June 10, and we discuss Steven Levy’s review of the product. The verdict? Bigger is indeed better.

This week’s podcast features Priya Ganapati and Brian Chen, with superb audio engineering by Michael Lennon.

If the embedded player above doesn’t work, you can download the Gadget Lab podcast #78 MP3 file.

Use iTunes? Subscribe to the Gadget Lab Audio Podcast in iTunes. Do it now!

Like video? Aim your browser at the Gadget Lab Video Podcast — available on iTunes and right here on the Gadget Lab blog.


Amazon Kindle DX gets torn apart, examined

Just as soon as we finally get our hands on a new unit to test out, the boys over at Rapir Repair are racing to rip one apart. And that’s just what they’ve done here with the Amazon Kindle DX. Inside it’s got the requisite boards, wires, tape and cat hairs (just kidding), plus an E727NV WN2 wireless card, memory, CPU and Epson E-ink panel controller. It’s actually pretty sparse and clean inside of there — we’d expect nothing less! Hit the read link for the full, glorious disassembling (though there is one more shot after the break).

Continue reading Amazon Kindle DX gets torn apart, examined

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Amazon Kindle DX gets torn apart, examined originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Jun 2009 19:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tweetlog: Amazon Kindle DX

kindle DX.jpgWhat’s the deal with the DX (http://tinyurl.com/m74toc), you ask? Think of it like the (awesome) Kindle 2—only with a bigger screen and price tag.

Kindle DX Review

Kindle DX is the true heir to the Kindle throne, but whether Amazon’s ebook kingdom is growing or shrinking depends on the next wave of books—textbooks. In the meantime, bigger screen, cool new tricks…

I know now I have a love/hate relationship with Kindle. The drive of Amazon to make this unlikely little thing a star is inspiring in a world where most companies just go around copying each other. Amazon has, from the beginning, delivered on so many of promises of e-readers—cheap books delivered instantly to a lightweight screen that’s easy on the eyes and stays powered for days on a single battery charge.

The Kindle 2 that hit this spring was a disappointment, nothing but a Kindle 1 with a more predictable design and some novelty tricks.

The DX, arriving just months later, solves real problems of the first generation. Internally, it has native PDF support, which allows for reading of the vast bulk of formal business literature, not to mention a bazillion easy-to-download copyright-free (free-free!) works of actual literature. Externally, the DX’s larger 10-inch screen makes it better suited to handle the content, not just PDFs, but textbooks, whose heavily formatted pages would look shabby on the smaller Kindle’s 6-inch screen.

The DX also has an inclinometer, so you can flip it sideways or even upside down. I didn’t know what that was for at first—but I do now.

The DX is not-so-secretly the smartest thing Amazon could do to show academic publishers it was time to green up and get with digital distribution. But it’s a real “if you build it, they will come” strategy, because although Amazon has announced that it “reached an agreement” with the three publishers who account for 60% of textbooks sold—Pearson, Cengage Learning and Wiley (but not Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)—we haven’t seen any actual textbooks distributed to Kindles yet and, more upsettingly, we have no idea how much they will cost or what weird rights issues may be involved in their “sale.”

So while we’re sitting here, DX in hand, waiting for the real reason for its existence to come to fruition, it doesn’t hurt to talk about it as a reader for regular books, right?

I am currently a little over halfway through Ken Follett’s Pillars of the Earth, a heavyweight champ of a book, even in paperback, that sits on my chest each night, restricting my breathing until I have no choice but to fall asleep.

As you can see from the scale shots below, the DX weighs about half as much as the paperback, a real load off my chest. (Sorry, couldn’t resist.) As Kindle lover Chen is apt to point out, the Kindle 2 is just half the weight of the DX, but I counter with this lazy man’s factoid: Even using a slightly larger font, I can see the equivalent of two and a half Kindle 2 pages on a DX screen. It is, in fact, a better reading experience.

When it comes to PDFs, the Kindle DX lives up to its unambitious promise: There they are, in the menu, the minute you copy them from your computer to the Kindle via USB. What won’t show up are .doc, .docx, Excel spreadsheets or any other text-based pseudo-standards from the Microsoft people, and no images either.

The good and bad thing about the PDFs is that they appear squarely in the DX’s 10-inch rectangular frame, “no panning, no zooming, no scrolling,” as Amazon’s bossman Jeff Bezos likes to say. This is wonderful when you have a PDF like my free copy of Bram Stoker’s Dracula. It’s presented in a big clear font and saved to PDF, meaning I can’t change the font size, but I don’t want to either. The trouble arises when you have something like the HP product brochure below. Damn thing was meant to be seen on a computer, with full-color graphics and the ability to zoom in on the fine print. As you can see, some print is so small, the Kindle’s slightly chunky E-Ink screen resolution can’t render it legibly.

That’s when I found that you really can zoom.

Remember I mentioned that inclinometer, that orients the screen horizontally or vertically depending on how you hold it? It’s not terribly useful for Kindle books, which are meant to look great in vertical (portrait) orientation. But when you’re looking at a PDF, and you can’t read everything, tilting the whole deal 90 degrees gets you a bit of a zoom. How much? If you think about it, that’s a little over 20%, not a lot, but a bit of a boost when you need it. The PDF support is so convenient, but means I especially miss the SD card slot from the first Kindle. It would make life with the DX a far sight easier.

So the screen is bigger, but perhaps still not big enough, at least for the text books and businessy documents. I’m happy to say that it’s finally reached the minimum required size for recreational reading, which is what most people will be buying it for anyway.

I haven’t got a lot to say about the newspaper industry that the Kindle will allegedly save, except that Kindle newspapers don’t look or feel anything like real newspapers, so they may disappoint a few old-schoolers out there. You don’t even get a fat front page of options pointing in all directions, but instead, incomplete tables of contents segregated by section. I am glad for the newspaper distribution on Kindle, but only in the same way that I am glad for the faxed New York Times cheatsheets they hand out at resorts that are too far from mainland USA to get an actual paper on time. Seriously, if this is somehow more accessible than reading a newspaper on a laptop, I’ll eat my hat.

The same goes for the text-to-speech that publishers are all frightened of. Sure, computer-generated voices are getting better, and the precedent set here might eventually shut down some voice-talent union, but in the meantime, their jobs are safe: I can’t imagine how anyone could listen to more than a paragraph. Apparently neither can Amazon: In the Kindle DX, the speech controls are buried, and you have to memorize a keystroke combination to get it working.

The DX also doesn’t give any new hope for E-Ink as a sustainable platform. The many people who bitch that color is king are not wrong, exactly, but color E-Ink is puke-tastic and far from cheap. Monochrome E-Ink may look nice by the light of your nightstand lamp—and thank God Amazon hasn’t gone and mucked it up like Sony did with that PRS (more like POS)-700—but it’s still too slow to leaf around the way you would a serious work of literature. (My best example of this is still Infinite Jest by the late great David Foster Wallace. I was surprised to discover that it’s actually finally available as a Kindle book, every glorious footnote intact albeit cumbersomely hyperlinked. I have always assumed it would be more daunting on a Kindle than in book form, but now that I have a chance to find out, I’ll have to get back to you.)

Unless E-Ink gets cheaper, faster, bigger and more colorful all at once, it’s doomed. The iPhone is an all-around worse system for book readin’, but way more people have iPhones, so it could beat Kindle by sheer momentum. And Mary Lou Jepsen’s Pixel Qi company is working on a new LCD screen that—like the OLPC XO screen she was instrumental in devising—will run on less power, be easy on the eyes in natural light, and have optimized modes for both black-and-white and color.

The hope for the current Kindles is that these boring old black-and-white textbooks we keep hearing about appear on the horizon like an army of indignant Ents. Give every college kid a DX and the chance to download half their texts to Kindle, and all bets are off.

So what happens next? Well like I said, we wait.

In Summary

Best ebook reader to date

Native PDF support

Larger screen means (almost) everything is easier to read

E-Ink screen is easy on the eyes and battery efficient, but makes pages slow to “turn” and does not come in color

Textbooks would be ideal, so let’s see the deals

$489 price tag is steep

No zooming means some PDFs will be unreadable

Amazon Kindle DX to start shipping on June 10th

Amazon just dropped word that the new Kindle DX will start shipping out on June 10th, a pleasant improvement on the previously vague “summer” release date. The device is still available for pre-order, and shipments of the $489, 9.7-inch, PDF-capable ebook will be on a first-come, first-served basis.

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Amazon Kindle DX to start shipping on June 10th originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Jun 2009 12:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Searching for eBooks at Book Expo 2009

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I visited Book Expo America in midtown Manhattan earlier today to check out the ways in which technology has seeped into the publishing world. From all the reports I’d heard leading up to the event, I expected something of a subdued gathering–a quiet mourning for the last days of paper publishing. It’s a testament perhaps, to the bubble that those us in the tech world live in that the show was anything but quiet: Registration lines snaked up and down the halls.

I’d heard talk of there being something in the neighborhood of 20 percent fewer exhibitors this year as well, but the large convention hall upstairs was packed to the walls with exhibitors, with industry attendees clogging up the aisles between booths.

Finding ebook readers was an entirely different matter. The vast majority of companies showing off these devices were segregated to a small piece of carpeting dubbed “New Media Zone.” Amazon was there with the Kindle, and Sony was showing a variety of its devices, but both companies were relegated to small tables in what couldn’t really pass for full booths.

Bezos: No Color Kindle for Years

jeff-bezos.jpgMost of our readers could have guessed this already, but at a Thursday Amazon shareholder’s meeting, CEO Jeff Bezos made it official: It’ll be quite a while before we see a Kindle with a color screen. “It’s definitely still in the development stage,” Bezos told investors in a Q&A.

Bezos also responded to questions about how many Kindle the company has sold–by not saying. “I’m not sure we will ever reveal all the numbers,” said Bezos, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Mr. Bezos: Get that color screen Kindle going, and I’ll buy one!