Justice Department settlement puts on-campus Kindle use on hold

Amazon may have recently announced it was beefing up the Kindle’s functionality for vision-impaired users, but it looks like that’s too little too late for three universities using Kindles as an alternative to textbooks, who have now agreed to shelve the e-readers until such enhancements are in place as part of a settlement with the Justice Department. Those universities include Pace, Case Western, and Reed College, who were all sued by two organizations representing the blind, which alleged that while the Kindle has a text-to-speech function, the menus do not, thereby making them impossible for blind students to use — another university testing the Kindle, Arizona State, has already reached a similar settlement. Assuming Amazon lives up to its promises, however, it looks like the Kindles could be put back to use as soon as this summer — and the universities in question will still be able to finish any pilot programs currently taking place this semester, just not expand their use.

Justice Department settlement puts on-campus Kindle use on hold originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Jan 2010 20:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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There Are Officially Too Damn Many Ebook Readers

A couple years back, we condemned digital photo frames as the spam of CES—this year, in the wake of the Christmas of Kindle, every company has its own ebook reader. And that’s a bad thing.

There will soon be two kinds of happy ebook-reader owners. The people who paid a fair amount for a reputable ebook reader from one of the companies they already buy books from, and the people who spend like $50 on a no-name ebook reader that supports a lot of formats, who gets every book they can think of as a pirated copy over BitTorrent. Everyone else—both the buyers of tier-two ebook readers and the makers of them—are going to be screwed.

You know we have an ambivalent attitude about the big-name ebook readers. The Kindle is the best ebook reader you can buy right now, if you’re in the market, but it’s still hampered by a slow e-ink black-and-white display—not to mention a heavy reliance on Amazon’s own book sales operation, which bothers some people. We respect what Jeff Bezos and Amazon have done to teach the world about digital book reading, and we understand why Barnes & Noble has to get in this game in order to plan for the future—or simply survive.

But the introduction of e-ink-based readers by many big tech companies and a handful of feisty little ones threatens to sow confusion in the market place, encourage piracy, and screw over any company who gets in and then can’t really hack it against Kindle and Nook. And all of it will be a pointless exercise when long-lasting slates are a reality.

E-ink is an interim technology, a stopgap measure to keep our attention till we have full-color video tablets (slates?) whose batteries last for “days.” A flood in the market might ensure that everyone buys one by this coming Christmas, but it’ll become increasingly hard to distinguish the good from the bad, will emphasize cheap devices over quality of interface and service, and will render most people completely confused and off-put.

They will buy some $100 reader, then wonder why they can’t borrow books from their friend who has a Nook, or can’t get the same stuff that’s sold on the Kindle. While I assume most of these new ebook readers support the ePub standard, buyers will easily run into dead ends in the labyrinth of DRM (understandably) required by the publishing business.

Some of these people will give up on buying books altogether, even if they don’t stop reading. Yes, a flood of cheap e-ink readers will grow ebook piracy more than ebook sales.

In fact, cheap e-ink readers will essentially be targeted at people with libraries of pirated books, for people who read the fine print of file compatibility, and ignore all the wireless connectivity and insta-bookstore stuff that consumers are currently excited about. Many of you would say that’s not a bad thing, and I think piracy is as inevitable as publishers going digital—whether they like it or not.

The worst thing of all is that these ebooks will all struggle to get out the door (like so many ebook players “introduced” last fall), or will die on storeshelves, the stuff nobody wants. Price will move some units, for sure, but most of them will be also-rans, like so many MP3 players released this past decade that weren’t iPods.

Maybe this glut of ebook readers isn’t offensive to you—most of you don’t have to step over them on your way to cover 3D TVs that are also everywhere at this show—but there’s no reason for them, and the more we try to keep track of, the more annoyed we get. Your choices: Go Kindle, wait for a cheap-as-hell reader, pray for a slate, or buy a book. A real paper-and-ink book.

Plastic Logic Aims New Que E-Reader at Business Users

Que e-reader

LAS VEGAS — After months of offering tantalizing bits of information, Plastic Logic has finally launched its new e-reader Que.

The Que proReader has an 8.5 x 11-inch touchscreen display and the ability to handle a range of documents such as Microsoft Word files, PowerPoint presentations, Excel spreadsheets, digital books, PDFs, magazines and newspapers.

CES 2010

It can also synchronize with Microsoft Outlook to display e-mails and calendar.

“E-readers today are reading devices for the casual reader,” says Richard Archuleta, chief executive of Plastic Logic. “What about folks who need it for business and reading lots of different documents? We are trying to create a paperless briefcase for them.”

The Que will be the latest entrant into what’s become of the hottest consumer electronics product categories. Last year alone, about 5 million e-readers were sold.  Amazon, one of the largest book retailers,  has said for the first time on Christmas day more e-books were sold than physical books.

Beautiful, Pricey Hardware

The Que e-reader designed by industrial design firm IDEO is the best-looking device in its category. It is extremely thin, lightweight (weighs less than a pound) and has a large shatterproof display that’s feels better than its rivals, such as Amazon’s Kindle DX.

The Que is driven by its touchscreen so it does not not have any buttons on it, except for a discreet home button at the upper right corner. The effect is similar to that of Apple’s iPhone.

The result is a sleek and rather sophisticated-looking gadget. But in the brief hands-on time that we spent with it, we noticed smudge marks and fingerprints all over the device.

Still from a design perspective, Plastic Logic’s Que is undoubtedly a beauty.

But open your wallets wide for it.

The 4-GB version of the Que with Wi-Fi and storage for about 35,000 documents will retail for $650. An $800 8-GB version that can store 75,000 documents and includes both Wi-Fi and 3G capability — powered by AT&T– will also be available.

The Que will start shipping mid-April but the company is taking pre-orders now.

Versatile and Format-Agnotisic

que e-reader2

Unlike the Sony Reader or the Barnes & Noble Nook, the Que is targeted at business users. So the device offers a number of features that are missing in its counterparts.

The e-reader syncs with your Microsoft Outlook account to display e-mails and the day’s appointments. It also pulls in attachments so you can click on and view them on the e-reader.

The top half of the screen features different documents, while the lower half shows those marked as favorites.

Plastic Logic inked partnerships with major content publishers so users can read magazines such as Fast Company and newspapers such as the Wall Street Journal and USA Today on the device.

Que’s biggest asset is that it can handle an e-book in the ePUB format with the same ease as a document from the Microsoft Office suite. It’s a feature that is likely to endear it to users who don’t want to carry multiple devices and pull up a laptop just to look at an Excel spreadsheet.

“The Que is not committed to a specific format,” says Archuleta.

Other features include search that looks through both your e-mail and documents, ability to create notes and annotate documents.

Plastic Logic will also have an app for BlackBerry phones so users can wirelessly sync content from their phones with the Que.

Photos: Priya Ganapati

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Amazon Kindle DX International: Too Late?

say-hello-to-kindle-dx-with-global-wireless

Overseas readers who haven’t already paid out their humiliation money to Amazon in return for the “International” Kindle, the e-reader that remains crippled outside of the US, now have a second opportunity waste some money.

Amazon will ship an international edition of its 9.7-inch screen Kindle DX, beginning January 19th. The oversized e-reader will cost $490, and replaces the current US-only unit. The new DX also benefits from the firmware update that gave its little brother better battery life.

The limitations of the smaller reader persist, too, including a smaller catalog than is available in the US, and no real web access through the browser in most countries. Hopefully Amazon will have managed to buy up some non-US power-plugs, which was (and still is) the first and most obvious insult to worldwide buyers.

If you want this, you’ll already know it, and are probably hitting the “buy” butting right now. If you’re unsure, we’d suggest waiting for a little while. Between the crazy crop of e-readers at CES this week, and Apple’s probable tablet announcement later this month, buying this now is probably foolish.

Amazon Introduces Kindle DX with Global Wireless [Amazon]

Kindle DX Wireless Reading Device [Amazon]

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Amazon Kindle DX with global wireless: ships January 19th for $489

Well, what do you know? Seems that Amazon’s Kindle DX will indeed be offered in a Global Wireless flavor, and it’ll soon be shipping to over 100 nations for the tidy sum of $489. Bezos and Company confirmed an earlier slip tonight by trumpeting the impending release of its 9.7-inch e-reader around the world, where we presume it’ll work exactly like the recently released International Kindle. ‘Course, you overseas folks will probably need to budget for a power converter and import duties, but you can get your pre-orders in right this moment.

Amazon Kindle DX with global wireless: ships January 19th for $489 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Jan 2010 00:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kindle DX now with global wireless?

See that text up there? The part of the site that reads “Kindle DX Now with Global Wireless.” Well, the Kindle DX doesn’t have have global wireless… yet. The link is dead but it certainly looks like Amazon is about to make good on its earlier promise to bring global roaming capabilities to the DX as it did with its 6-inch Kindle. In fact, we’re expecting a press release any time now.

[Thanks, Brad]

Kindle DX now with global wireless? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Jan 2010 03:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Skiff Reader: The Largest Yet Thinnest eBook Reader to Date

It’s bigger than any Kindle or device from B&N. Optimized for magazines and newspapers, the Skiff Reader offers a durable 11.5-inch (1600 x 1200) “Metal Foil” touchscreen display, but it’s still just a quarter of an inch thick.

Connecting to the upcoming Skiff digital store via Wi-Fi and Sprint’s 3G network, the Skiff Reader will support yet unannounced content partnerships including books, specially focusing on large format print like above-mentioned magazines and newspapers—including “visually appealing layouts, high-resolution graphics, rich typography and dynamic updates.” And with a screen that’s nearly two inches larger and significantly sharper than even a Kindle DX, the Skiff Reader certainly seems well-positioned for this role—even though it’s still just black and white.

There’s no word on price or availability (more specific than 2010) just yet, but when the Skiff Reader is available, you’ll be picking one up from Sprint.

NEW YORK, January 4th, 2010 – Skiff, LLC and Sprint (NYSE: S) today announced that they will preview the Skiff Reader, the first e-reader optimized for newspaper and magazine content, at the 2010 International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas later this week.

The Skiff Reader, the initial dedicated device to integrate the upcoming Skiff e-reading service, is remarkably sleek and easy to use. At just over a quarter-inch in overall height, the device is the thinnest e-reader announced to date. It features the largest and highest-resolution electronic-paper display yet unveiled in a consumer device, at 11.5″ in size (measured diagonally) and a resolution of 1600 x 1200 pixels (UXGA). A full touchscreen enables users to intuitively navigate and engage with the newspapers, magazines, books and other digital content they purchase through the Skiff Store, as well as personal and work documents. The device weighs just over one pound and lasts over a week of average use between charges.

“The Skiff Reader’s big screen will showcase print media in compelling new ways,” said Gilbert Fuchsberg, president of Skiff, LLC. “This is consistent with Skiff’s focus on delivering enhanced reading experiences that engage consumers, publishers and advertisers.”

The Skiff Reader is designed not just for sleekness but also for durability. It is the first consumer product to feature the next-generation of e-paper display – one based on a thin, flexible sheet of stainless-steel foil. This contrasts with the fragile glass that is the foundation of almost every electronic screen – and a primary source of vulnerability and breakage risk in the devices that incorporate them. Skiff has worked closely with LG Display (NYSE: LPL), one of the world’s leading display manufacturers and the innovator of the foil-display technology, to optimize and implement this first-of-its-kind non-glass display uniquely for the Skiff Reader.

Skiff has signed a multi-year agreement with Sprint (NYSE:S) to provide 3G connectivity for Skiff’s dedicated e-reading devices in the United States. Plans are underway to have the Skiff Reader available for purchase later this year in more than 1,000 Sprint retail locations across the U.S., as well as online at www.sprint.com. Availability, pricing, additional distribution channels and other details will be disclosed at a later date.

“The forthcoming launch of the Skiff Reader is an exciting development for consumers who are looking for more and more choice in the arena of embedded devices,” said Dan Dooley, president wholesale solutions, Sprint. “We have witnessed a strong demand for e-readers in recent years and now Sprint is showing its commitment to Skiff by making this new device available on the 3G network and for sale in Sprint retail stores.”

In October 2009, Sprint announced the formation of its Emerging Solutions Business that focuses exclusively on the rapid delivery of machine-to-machine and mobile computing solutions to businesses and consumers. Sprint’s partnership with Skiff builds on more than 10 years of experience in working with vendors to provision non-Sprint-branded devices to operate on its networks, as well as extensive expertise in operating multiple platforms and assets.

In addition to 3G, the Skiff Reader will also support wireless connectivity via WiFi.

The Skiff Reader will feature the Skiff service and digital store, allowing consumers to wirelessly purchase and access a wide variety of newspapers, magazines, books, blogs and other content from multiple publishers. Newspaper and magazine content delivered by Skiff will feature visually appealing layouts, high-resolution graphics, rich typography and dynamic updates, supporting key design qualities that help publications differentiate themselves and attract subscribers and advertisers.

Besides the Skiff Reader, Skiff is working with major consumer electronics manufacturers to integrate Skiff’s service, digital store and client software into a range of innovative devices. By supporting a variety of devices from multiple manufacturers, and through complementary applications for major smart phone platforms, Skiff will make it easier for publishers to distribute content and advertising across a range of devices and form factors, an increasingly important goal as the e-reading market continues to grow.

Amazon: Kindle Books Outsold Real Books This Christmas

Happy Christmas. I got a coffee pot. You? If you got a book, it’s likely that it wasn’t made of paper. The succinct title of this Amazon press release tells the whole story: “On Christmas Day, for the First Time Ever, Customers Purchased More Kindle Books Than Physical Books.”

According to the release, “Kindle has become the most gifted item in Amazon’s history.” Amazon still refuses to break out actual Kindle sales figures, but the following snippet shows you just how good a holiday season Amazon had: “On Amazon’s peak day, December 14, 2009, customers ordered over 9.5 million items worldwide.” That’s a number that would bring most servers to their knees, let alone physical delivery fulfillment systems.

Let’s make sure we read those figures right, though. “On Christmas Day customers purchased more Kindle books than physical books.” Considering that many people received Kindle’s for Christmas, it is likely that they then bought books (it is rather too easy to do). How many people, in comparison, were ordering physical books on Christmas Day?

What this still means is that e-books are now mainstream. The Kindle has its flaws, and it is certainly nothing like the devices we will use to read books in the future, but for now it has that critical combination of brand awareness, catalog and full integration. This, if you remember, is how Apple’s iPod killed the competition nearly ten years ago, with another small white box sporting a monochrome display. It took the iPod and iTunes many years to become the number one music retailer in the US. The Kindle has overtaken the competition (Amazon) in just two years.

And we recommend following the link. Amazon really knows how to write an interesting press release.

Amazon Kindle is the Most Gifted Item Ever on Amazon.com [Amazon]


E-reader privacy policies compared: Big Kindle is watching you

It’s definitely shaping up to be the year of e-book readers: the Amazon Kindle is flying off (virtual) shelves, and we’d expect the Barnes & Noble Nook to start moving at a decent clip once the kinks get worked out. But any device with an always-on 3G connection to a central server raises some privacy questions, especially when it can broadcast granular, specific data about what you’re reading — data that’s subject to a wide spectrum of privacy laws and regulations when it comes to real books and libraries, but much less so in the digital realm. We’d say it’s going to take a while for all the privacy implications of e-books to be dealt with by formal policy, but in the meantime the best solution is to be informed — which is where this handy chart from our friends at the Electronic Frontier Foundation comes in. As you’d expect, the more reading you do online, the more you can be tracked — and Google Books, the Kindle, and the Nook all log a ton of data that can be shared with law enforcement and various other third parties if required. Of course, we doubt the cops are too interested in your Twilight reading habits, but honestly, we’d rather users weren’t tracked at all. Check the full chart and more at the read link.

[Thanks, Tom]

E-reader privacy policies compared: Big Kindle is watching you originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 27 Dec 2009 16:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kindle most gifted item in Amazon’s history, e-books outsell physical tomes on Christmas Day

We’re still not about say the e-book reader industry has branched out beyond the infancy stage, but one of its flagship products certainly has reason to celebrate. Amazon has announced it’s hit some pretty big milestones with the Kindle. The two bullet points it’s currently touting loudest is that the reader has become “the most gifted item” in the company’s history — quite an achievement given the size of the online retailer, but what’s missing here is any quantitative sales data to give us even a ballpark of the number of units sold. The other big news is that on Christmas Day (we’re guessing not Christmas Eve, else the press release surely would’ve mentioned it, too), e-book sales actually outsold physical books. Those brand new Kindle owners needed something to read, right? It’ll be interesting to see if that momentum is maintained through next year, especially with some major publishers starting to show some teeth with digital delays.

The Kindle bits were all part of Amazon’s annual post-holiday statistical breakdown, so in case you’re wondering, besides Kindle, the company is claiming its other top-selling electronics were the 8GB iPod Touch and Garmin nuvi260W, and in the wireless department the honor goes to Nokia’s unlocked 5800 XpressMusic, Plantronic’s 510 Bluetooth headset, and AT&T’s edition of the BlackBerry Bold 9700.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Kindle most gifted item in Amazon’s history, e-books outsell physical tomes on Christmas Day originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 27 Dec 2009 09:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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