Amazon takes 70 percent of Kindle newspaper revenues

The Kindle DX launch might have sparked a wave of hype about the next generation of newspapers, but not everyone’s so quick to agree: Dallas Morning News CEO James Moroney told a Senate subcommittee yesterday that the Kindle isn’t a “platform that’s going to save newspapers in the near term.” According to Moroney, Amazon demands 70 percent of subscription revenue from newspapers, and further requires content owners to grant Amazon the right to republish content to other devices — like, say, the iPhone. That’s a pretty inequitable split, and while we understand that Amazon has to pay for Whispernet somehow, it’s hard to imagine newspaper publishers lining up to wager 70 percent of their digital subscription revenues and a perpetual license to their content on devices that are far from proven. On the other hand, it’s innovate or die time for these guys, so we’ll see what happens — with all the competitors out there poised to make a move, things are about to get interesting.

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Amazon takes 70 percent of Kindle newspaper revenues originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 07 May 2009 13:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Poll: Will you buy a Kindle DX?

Now that the dust is beginning to settle, we here at Engadget are wondering how all of you are feeling about your new Kindle options. With the Kindle 2 still in its infancy, and the newborn Kindle DX ready to hit the scene (not to mention the host of other e-reader options), how are you likely to spend all that cash you normally shell out on paper and ink Neal Stephenson novels? Will you make the leap to e-ink, or are you still bound and determined to cart The Baroque Cycle around in a Radio Flyer? We’ve already shared some of our thoughts — tell us how you feel in the poll below — and feel free to quote The Diamond Age in the comments.

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Poll: Will you buy a Kindle DX? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 May 2009 18:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kindle DX college plans revealed: only 300 students total

We knew the Kindle DX pilot programs at Arizona State, Case Western Reserve, Princeton, Pace, Reed, and Darden School of Business at the University of Virginia would be limited in number, but it sounds like students at those schools will have be extremely lucky or well-connected to get their hands on Amazon’s latest — according to Pace reps at today’s launch event, each school will only receive around 50 Kindle DXs for the trial. That’s just about 300 total Kindles, and it makes Amazon’s crowing about revolutionizing education seem a little hasty. Not only that, but it’s not like the program is particularly ready to go, either: the schools still haven’t figured out which classes they’ll try and switch over to the Kindle, instructors have yet to be brought on board, and it’s still not clear whether Amazon or the schools themselves will pay for the Kindles, although students will definitely have to shell out for the books. That’s a lot of dealmaking to get done — looks like Amazon just gave itself some summer homework.

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Kindle DX college plans revealed: only 300 students total originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 May 2009 16:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Does the Lack of an Amazon Patent Mean No Dual-Screen Kindle?

Kindle DX shot.jpgAmazon launched the widescreen Kindle DX Wednesday morning, with an eye toward improving the reading experience of large-format books and newspapers.

Given an apparently discarded patent application, however, Amazon probably won’t be designing a dual-screen model any time soon, to more fully replicate the look and feel of an open book.

EDIT 8:02 AM PDT: Several readers have contacted me to note that the “11/” designation does indeed indicate a non-provisional patent, which means Amazon could pursue this device at some future time.

On Wednesday night, Amazon was awarded another design patent for the Kindle, which covered the general shape of the device. But deep inside the list of references for that patent and others is this:

Video: Amazon Kindle DX

Our editor-in-chief Lance Ulanoff was at the Kindle DX launch event at Pace University in  Manhattan today. Not only did he live blog the announcement and take photos, he also managed to shoot some quick video of the new widescreen eBook reader during the hands-on time after Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s presentation. Check out the video, after the jump.

Editorial: Engadget on the Kindle DX

You wouldn’t think what amounts to a screen-size upgrade over the Kindle 2 would provoke such heated debate, but discussion at Engadget HQ has been at fever pitch since Bezos & Co. announced the Kindle DX this morning. Rather than try and condense the opinions of the staff into one Grand Unified Theory of The Ebook Market, we thought we’d let everyone speak for themselves — check it out below.

Update: Paul tacked on his thoughts as well.

Continue reading Editorial: Engadget on the Kindle DX

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Editorial: Engadget on the Kindle DX originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 May 2009 14:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon Kindle DX first hands-on (with video!)

We just got a quick first in-person look at Amazon’s new Kindle DX. It looks bigger! Some quick thoughts on the device:

  • It’s not really drastically different from the Kindle 2. Not in any way. The ability to auto-rotate is nice, and the big screen is definitely easier on the eyes when it comes to reading newspapers, but largely this is the same beast.
  • The screen looks great. It may just be the demo units here, but the blacks seem to be darker than they are on the Kindle 2. We’ll have to hold this judgment for when we’ve got a review unit in our hands.
  • Screen refresh is largely unchanged. You’ll still see those black flashes when you turn the page.
  • The keyboard seems better to us than the Kindle 2’s. The keys are more raised, and there’s more real estate for typing. It’s still not an awesome experience, but it’s improved.
  • The size difference really is notable. The DX is a large device. It’s not the kind of thing you’ll be throwing into a purse, though it’s not so large that you wouldn’t consider it over the Kindle 2. In fact, if we had to choose right now, the Kindle DX wins hands-down.
  • $489 is a lot of money for a device like this. Amazon is really going to have to show some considerable cuts on pricing for their deals with the NYT / schools to make this attractive to end-users.

And check out the videos after the break!

Continue reading Amazon Kindle DX first hands-on (with video!)

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Amazon Kindle DX first hands-on (with video!) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 May 2009 12:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kindle DX: What Works and What Amazon Still Needs To Do

I was an early believer in Kindle, but I thought it would evolve more quickly than this. Kindle DX is a step forward—more than the Kindle 2—but there’s still work to be done.

The larger screen isn’t just cosmetic. It helps Amazon add functionality without having to justify the screen’s inherent slowness. Today, we heard this a lot: “No panning, no zooming, no scrolling.” The E-Ink screen isn’t fast enough to support those actions smoothly, but now, at 9.7″, it doesn’t necessarily need to.

This opens the door for the long overdue PDF support, which is now native—teachers and colleagues can distribute reports the way they best know how, and it will look good on an easy-to read screen. Not only that, but they can distribute ridiculously unoptimized PDFs, because the Kindle now has 3.3GB of storage (though no more SD slot). Amazon’s Jeff Bezos says you can store 1,500 books, but the way I see it, medical professionals and engineers will store a few hundred PDFs. The $489 price is easy to justify in certain specialized fields. (It’s also going to allow easier access to pirated books, which may not be good for the book-publishing industry, but is certainly good for Kindle sales.)

The relationship with newspaper publishers is shaky at best. I can’t see how an industry that’s hemorrhaging money can subsidize a newfangled tech product in order to lure people (who exactly?) back to subscribing for something they are forced to publish for free online anyway. The early alliance is even more tenuous when you realize that special pricing is only offered to would-be subscribers outside of the reach of home delivery. (At least, it is for now.)

And as for maintaining the look and feel of an ink-stained broadsheet—or even a tabloid—a 9.7″ screen doesn’t do much to get closer to that than the current 6″ screen.

The rest of Bezos’ big bullet points—fast 3G network, 275,000 books and counting, $10 or less for bestsellers, no monthy fees—were all there more or less in the beginning, and are things that in no way distinguish the Kindle DX from the Kindle that came out in 2007.

So what does Amazon still need to work on?

An Alliance with Text Book Publishers UPDATED Forget NYT Bestsellers. The real way to move Kindles is to sell them to every college kid with the software equivalent of 200 backbreaking pounds of textbook. Bezos teased this in his speech, even named names but he didn’t do it with enough conviction to convince me a deal was in the works anywhere close to being hammered out. Believe me, when the Prentice Halls and Houghton Mifflins of the world come around to offering reasonably priced Kindle editions of their high school and university top sellers, you’re gonna hear about it.

iPhone App Updates The iPhone Kindle app was a good start, but we haven’t heard much about it since the beginning. It lacked the ability to shop, it had no search or dictionary. Many people still feel that the ebook trend will only take off when the smartphones (all of ’em)—plus netbooks and tablets—get with the Amazon book retail juggernaut and make sweet sweet DRM-infected love. Only then will demand for specialized easy-on-the-eyes devices like Kindle be super obvious to Ma and Pa.

Keep Improving the Screen, and Investigate LCD The New York Times started printing its front page in color in like 1997 or 1998, if I’m not mistaken. That’s over a decade of color for even the stodgiest of print pubs. (USA Today launched with color a decade before.) Pushing the E-Ink stuff is fine, but if you’re going to charge uberdollars, let’s see some color E-Ink. Not like they have larger customers than Amazon lined up. And while we’re on the subject, how about checking in with Mary Lou Jepsen and the ultralowpowered, super awesome LCD screens she says she’s working on? Blam wants touchscreens and backlighting, but that can backfire. I’d settle for something that’s fast enough to allow for true “leafing” through a book.

Upgrade Old Kindles, Or Make New Ones Upgradeable Simply put, don’t screw your loyal constituents. That’s something Steve Jobs is known to do from time to time, but even Apple knows that you have to give a little something something to the people who paid top dollar for last year’s product. PDF support would be a nice one, if only for that whole “No panning, no zooming, no scrolling” limitation. Seems the feature in the new device is a flaw in the old.

At the end, I have to applaud Amazon’s continued investment and exploration of ebook readers, and if I sound impatient, it’s only because I have the compressed hindsight of other product evolutions (MP3 players, movie discs, etc.) to compare this with. Two years isn’t a long time to revolutionize an entire industry, and this will take much longer than that, but we want to make sure that progress is being made, and that Bezos isn’t squandering Amazon’s natural advantage in this field. [Kindle DX on Gizmodo]

Amazon Announces Large-Screen Kindle DX for Textbooks, Newspapers

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos took the stage today at Manhattan’s Pace University to unveil the latest version of the company’s popular line of Kindle ebook readers, the second such announcement in the space of a few months. The DX, the third model in the Kindle line, boasts a 9.7-inch screen, which is 2.5 times the size of Kindles 1 and 2 and designed to display periodicals and textbooks.

The display’s electronic paper features 16 different shades of gray. The new model has native PDF support for documents that can be imported via USB. And PDF content can be read without scrolling, zooming or panning.

Also on the Kindle DX, as on the iPhone, auto-rotation automatically switches the device’s display mode when it is flipped by the users. And the DX features 3G wireless access and 3.3GB of storage, which, according to the company, should hold roughly 3,500 books.

Live Blog: Amazon Kindle Press Conference

Kindle 2.jpg

You might get a strong sense of deja-vu reading this, but Amazon is holding a Kindle press conference this morning. Yes, the company just launched the Kindle 2 a couple months ago, but it’s apparently not taking any time off. It’s also not saying much about what will be announced–but a few details may have leaked out.

Of course, I’ll be there to report on the announcement along with Dan Costa. Check back soon for all the details! The festivities begin at 10:30 EST. If I have connectivity, I’ll live-blog. Otherwise I’ll post info and photos as soon as humanly possible.

OK, I’m in! And we’re live. I’ll start posting after the jump.