Plastic Logic e-book reader will use AT&T for its 3G needs

Things seem to really in motion for Plastic Logic, first with news of a partnership with Barnes & Noble and now this. AT&T is announcing that it’ll be providing 3G data for the company’s upcoming e-reader, the capabilities of which we found out during a noteworthy showing at D7. Still lots of questions up in the air, though, such as if AT&T will charge monthly for the use or provide service gratis like Sprint does with the Kindle. We’re also wondering if it’ll have access to AT&T’s numerous public Wi-Fi hot spots. One bright note is that, unlike Sprint and its CDMA towers, AT&T’s GSM network is compatible with carriers worldwide, which makes an international transition theoretically much smoother. Early 2010 can’t come soon enough.

[Thanks, Tom]

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Plastic Logic e-book reader will use AT&T for its 3G needs originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Jul 2009 00:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Plastic Logic E-Book Reader to Use ATT Wireless

Plastic Logic

Electronic books reader manufacturer Plastic Logic announced Wednesday that it will offer wireless access in its upcoming devices through AT&T’s 3G network. The e-book reader expected to launch early next year will also have Wi-Fi connectivity.

“Built in 3G access adds mobility to the product and allows users access to books at all times, wherever they are,” Daren Benzi, vice president of business development at Plastic Logic told Wired.com

The move also positions Plastic Logic  squarely against Amazon’s Kindle e-reader that uses Sprint’s wireless connectivity for over-the-air book downloads and basic internet surfing.

Since Amazon launched the Kindle in 2007, the e-books reader market has taken off with more than 15 models of e-readers available today.  E-readers with 6-inch displays, such as those seen in the Kindle 2 or Sony Reader, are the most popular among consumers. But earlier this year, Amazon launched the Kindle DX with a 9.7-inch screen for $490.

Plastic Logic is targeting its e-readers at business users. The device is about 8.5 x 11 inch, the size of a large notepad, less than 0.25-inches thick and has a touchscreen interface. The company has not disclosed pricing for the product.

On Monday, book retailing giant Barnes & Noble said it will power the Plastic Logic devices through its new e-books store. Barnes & Noble’s e-book store will have more than 700,000 titles, compared to the 300,000 odd books that its closest rival Amazon has. And because of  the wireless capability of the Plastic Logic devices, the combination will be a completely integrated experience for consumers, says William Lynch, president of Barnes&Noble.com.

Lynch did not comment on whether Barnes & Noble would eventually sell Plastic Logic devices at its stores but said the e-book store partnership with the latter is not exclusive. “We are open to working with other manufacturers,” says Lynch.

The Plastic Logic Reader will offer users more than just newspapers, books and magazine content. It will support the document formats such as PDF, Word, PowerPoint and Excel, some of which current e-readers cannot.

Plastic Logic is also counting on AT&T’s wide network of Wi-Fi hotspots to please its customers, says Benzi.

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Photo: Plastic Logic Reader/Plastic Logic

more than 200 countries and regions. AT&T is also the nation’s largest Wi-Fi provider,


New Barnes Noble E-book Store to Power Plastic Logic Reader

Plastic LogicBarnes & Noble is getting into the e-books business, all guns blazing, as it announced a new expanded e-book store that will be available across different devices such iPhone, BlackBerry and the yet-to-be released Plastic Logic e-reader.

The company’s e-book store will have more than 700,000 titles, compared to the 300,000 or so that its closest rival Amazon boasts. More than half-million public domain books from Google will also be part of Barnes & Noble’s electronic bookstore and can be downloaded for free, it said. Sony has a similar deal with Google to make the public domain books available for its e-book reader customers. But Amazon does not offer the free books to its Kindle customers.

At just about 1 percent, e-book sales are a fraction of the $25 billion book publishing business in the U.S. but it is a category that is growing rapidly. So far, Amazon has been the most successful at seamlessly integrating its online book store with its Kindle e-book reader because of the over-the-air wireless book downloads feature.

Through the partnership with Plastic Logic, Barnes & Noble hopes to counter Amazon’s Kindle threat. Plastic Logic is expected to start shipping a new device early next year that could be a rival to Amazon’s broadsheet Kindle DX launched last month. Plastic Logic’s e-reader is 0.27 inches thick and has a 8.5 x 11 inch E Ink touchscreen display that makes it seem almost like a large notepad.

Barnes & Noble’s e-book store will support the EPub format that has also been adopted by Sony. Yet Barnes & Noble’s e-bookstore won’t be accessible by Sony Reader, the company said. Amazon Kindle users, also, won’t be able to download books from Barnes & Noble’s e-book store.

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Photo: Plastic Logic E-Reader/Plastic Logic


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.

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

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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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Polymer Vision yields to bankruptcy, we bid Readius adieu

Ugh. Another one bites the gently gnashed rock particles, as they say. Polymer Vision, which was already having some pretty significant cash flow issues back in April, has reportedly caved under pressure and sought shelter under Chapter 11. According to the Hampshire Chronicle, the company famous for developing a bendable e-paper display has fittingly folded, leaving its 50 employees searching for new lines of work and millions of fans grasping for answers. The report continues to say that the promising (but oft delayed) Readius display isn’t likely to ship in its current form, and now it seems that the future is quite murky for the company and its flagship product. Call us crazy, but if you’re looking for an easy way into the e-paper market, you might be able to pick up whatever’s left here for a song. Just sayin’.

[Thanks, Charlie]

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Polymer Vision yields to bankruptcy, we bid Readius adieu originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 18 Jul 2009 14:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon remotely deletes Orwell e-books from Kindles, unpersons reportedly unhappy (update)

If you’re into keeping tabs on irony, check this out. Amazon apparently sent out its robotic droogs last night, deleting copies of the George Orwell novels Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four from Kindles without explanation, then refunding the purchase price. As you can imagine, a lot of people caught in the thick of Winston and Julia’s love story aren’t very happy — and rightfully so — the idea that we “own” the things we buy is pretty fundamental to… ownership. We’re not sure exactly what happened, but it seems that the publisher of said novels, MobileReference, has changed its mind about selling content on the Kindle, and poof! Amazon remotely deleted all previously purchased copies. It’s all a bit Orwellian, is it not? Good thing we “permanently borrowed” hard copies of both from our middle school library, huh? Let Hate Week commence.

Update: According to commenters on Amazon, this message was sent out from the company’s customer service department:

The Kindle edition books Animal Farm by George Orwell. Published by MobileReference (mobi) & Nineteen Eighty-Four (1984) by George Orwell. Published by MobileReference (mobi) were removed from the Kindle store and are no longer available for purchase. When this occurred, your purchases were automatically refunded. You can still locate the books in the Kindle store, but each has a status of not yet available. Although a rarity, publishers can decide to pull their content from the Kindle store.

While that publisher’s version of the book may have been removed, it appears other versions of the novels are still available.

Update 2: Drew Herdener, Amazon.com’s Director of Communications, pinged us directly with the following comment, and now things are starting to make a lot more sense. Seems as if the books were added initially by an outfit that didn’t have the rights to the material.

These books were added to our catalog using our self-service platform by a third-party who did not have the rights to the books. When we were notified of this by the rights holder, we removed the illegal copies from our systems and from customers’ devices, and refunded customers. We are changing our systems so that in the future we will not remove books from customers’ devices in these circumstances.

Still, what’s upsetting is the idea that something you’ve purchased can be quietly taken back by Amazon with no explanation and no advance notice. It’s a rotten policy, regardless of the motivations behind this particular move.

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Amazon remotely deletes Orwell e-books from Kindles, unpersons reportedly unhappy (update) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Jul 2009 16:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon reportedly close to deal for UK Kindle

This one isn’t a done deal just yet, but Mobile Today is reporting that Amazon is “close to finalizing a launch date” for the Kindle in the UK, and that it’s now in “advanced negotiations with a mobile operator for an MVNO.” From the sound of it, however, Amazon is taking a somewhat hands-off approach this time around, with it not only tapping Qualcomm to manufacture the device, but to secure connectivity for it with a carrier as well. What’s more, it seems that the UK Kindle will include both 3G and WiFi connectivity which, as SlashGear notes, would seem to suggest that either T-Mobile or O2 would be likely partners, considering that each already has some sizable WiFi networks of their own in place.

[Via SlashGear]

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Amazon reportedly close to deal for UK Kindle originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Jul 2009 13:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rupert Murdoch staying out of the e-reader business, Red Eye sadly still on the air

With the news biz in obvious (and some might say terminal) disarray, of course folks in the industry will be seeking out ways to stay afloat in the age of the e-reader — and it’s long been rumored that Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp is looking to launch a device of its own (if by “long” you mean “since early April or thereabouts”). When asked yesterday if this was the case, Murdoch answered: “I don’t think that’s likely. We’re looking and talking to a lot of laboratories and big companies around the world like Sony, Fujitsu, Samsung. We’re all working on wireless readers for books or for newspapers or for magazines. I think they’re a year or two away, being marketed in a mass way, high quality ones. And we will be absolutely neutral. We’re very happy to have our products distributed over any device provided it’s only going to subscribers who are paying for it.” Of course, the man may have some sort of diabolical scheme up his sleeve (when doesn’t he, really?), but for the time being, he says, the Wall Street Journal is doing “very well… you’ve got the wallstreetjournal.com and you pay for it. And there is 1.25 million people nearly who are doing that. And we get a lot of advertising with it. It’s a big business for us.” So it’s more likely that we’ll see more News Corp papers adopting an online subscription model before the advent of any Fox News e-ink device. But if it does get in the hardware business, we’ll gladly shell out for a Glenn Beck signature model. But only if it’s ironic.

[Via GigaOM]

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Rupert Murdoch staying out of the e-reader business, Red Eye sadly still on the air originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Jul 2009 10:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Elonex launches £189 6-inch eBook reader through Borders UK

Elonex has been dabbling in small screen wares for quite some time now, so it’s not a huge surprise to finally see it join the likes of BeBook, Sony and Amazon by introducing its very own eBook reader. Design wise, the 6-inch reader looks an awful lot like that played-out OEM model that everyone seems to start with, but hey, you won’t find us kvetching about competition. The device is launching exclusively at Borders UK, and with that comes the new Borders eBook Download Store. With a 4GB expansion card, there’s room for some 8,000 ebooks, and the 9 millimeter-thin frame ensures that this one won’t bog you down too much. Interested consumers over in the UK can snap this one up right now for £189 ($311), and that price nets you 100 free ebooks, a charger, data cable and a great sense of pride.

[Thanks, Sam]

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Elonex launches £189 6-inch eBook reader through Borders UK originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Jul 2009 12:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kindle DX sold out, but not for long

Well, it didn’t happen quite as fast as the original Kindle, but it looks like the Kindle DX has now officially sold out, a full two days after it first became available. As you might expect, however, folks eager to get their hands on the large and in charge device don’t have to wait too long to get their fix, with Amazon promising that the next batch of Kindle DXs will be in stock on June 17th. Of course, as ComputerWorld notes, the fast sellout has once again prompted speculation from analysts that Amazon is intentionally keeping supply low to create more of a buzz around the device, but Amazon itself is naturally staying mum on the matter for now.

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Kindle DX sold out, but not for long originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 12 Jun 2009 14:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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