Editorial: My next iPad won’t be a 7-incher, but I wish it could be

It took me a while, but I’m starting to fall in love with my iPad in a way I haven’t loved a gadget for a long while. There’s something about the form factor, the apps, the OS that feels just right and makes me want to do as much of my daily computing on it as possible. Of course, that’s still a pretty small sliver of my overall day, and the iPad isn’t even close to replacing my laptop for the large majority of my work, but I’m finding myself increasingly doing casual browsing, casual gaming, serious writing, and, yes, even some reading on Apple’s 10-inch tablet.

But I have one “big” problem with the tablet that doesn’t look like it’ll be solved anytime soon: it’s not 7 inches. Will Apple ever eat its words and build a smaller iPad, or will the 7-inch form factor be left to the rest of the emerging tablet market to fight over?

Continue reading Editorial: My next iPad won’t be a 7-incher, but I wish it could be

Editorial: My next iPad won’t be a 7-incher, but I wish it could be originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 26 Nov 2010 17:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Barnes and Noble Nook firmware version 1.5 now available

Barnes and Noble’s just made version 1.5 of its Nook e-reader’s firmware available. What can Nook owners expect from this latest upgrade? Well, the company says it boasts improved page refresh rates about 50 percent faster than the previous version — which is good news as we found it to be slower than its competitors. The update — which is available for both the 3G and WiFi versions — is also Barnes and Noble’s largest to date for the readers, and includes other fixes such as syncing across devices like the Nook’s various apps (finally!), customizable folders for your library, password protection options, improved search functions and battery performance. That sure does sound like a big update to us, so go get it if you’re a Nook user! Full press release is below.

Continue reading Barnes and Noble Nook firmware version 1.5 now available

Barnes and Noble Nook firmware version 1.5 now available originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 22 Nov 2010 17:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NOOKcolor: Hands-On Review and Thoughts for the Future

NOOKcolor is the only “reader’s tablet,” straddling dedicated e-book readers like the Kindle and multipurpose tablets like the iPad. I was expecting tradeoffs. I wasn’t expecting its advantages.

The first advantage is the ease of the product in the hand. Seven-inch tablets aren’t just less expensive to produce than their ten-inch counterparts: they’re easier to hold, particularly when they’re as thin and light as the NOOKcolor. They’re easier to type on using a software keyboard than either a smartphone or a tablet.

In fact, text entry on the NOOKcolor may the best experience I’ve had using a software keyboard on any device. It’s light-years ahead of the Kindle’s shrunk-down hardware keyboard.

The second advantage is some of the content. Barnes & Noble offers full-color children’s books and magazine subscriptions. The storefront and reading implementation are better here than anything offered by Apple or Amazon.

Apple could and should have owned this sector of the reading market. iBooks could do everything that NOOKcolor does — but if Apple TV has been a hobby, iBooks has been background noise for the computer company. They don’t do book retail or much care about it. And in magazines, they’ve pursued (or at least enabled) an infatuation with oversized, Adobe-made apps. Amazon has a decent excuse: it has doggedly pursued black-and-white E Ink reading, and made that experience best in-class.

Barnes & Noble has been able to leverage their position as a giant retailer of both children’s books and magazines to work with publishers to create a unified reading experience in each genre. Browsing magazines on a NOOKcolor is the same from one title to another, and the interface is similar (if not quite identical) to children’s books.

Magazines are nearly exact copies of printed issues, with full-color illustrations and advertisements. Now, there are a LOT of advertisements; if you’re as amazed as I am at the sheer number of ads most magazines pack into the front of their issues, the effect is, if anything, more uncanny when you’re flipping through on a seven-inch tablet.

NOOKcolor in Article Mode

However, you can read the magazines just for the articles, with a handy interface feature called “Article Mode.” It’s similar to what Safari and the Kindle offer for the web, but has an extra utility applied to magazines. You can even swipe from page to page staying in Article Mode, skipping from article to article.

There are a few small UI issues with Article Mode. The biggest is probably trying to shift from horizontal swiping (which is how you navigate from page to page in a magazine) to vertical scrolling (which is how you read through a column of text in article mode). Article Mode is also just flat text: if a magazine Q&A distinguishes between interviewer and interviewee by using different-colored text, all that formatting is stripped out in article mode.

In fact, in general, everything about transitioning between vertical and horizontal, landscape and portrait on NOOKcolor is probably more awkward than it needs to be. It has a built-in accelerometer, but doesn’t switch perspectives on every screen, just some of them.

The home-screen interface is portrait-only. Children’s books are landscape-only. Magazines and books are either — even though magazines and books have a different user interface. Children’s books let you use multitouch pinch and zoom; magazines really don’t. Web sites also come in both portrait or landscape — but this is where we get into the tradeoffs of the Nook’s seven-inch size.

On web sites, you quickly move from a shrunk-down, too-distant portrait view to a squeezed-in landscape view that’s readable but cuts off most of the page. As on the Kindle, I usually found myself manually entering in mobile URLs for sites. Once I did this, the browsing experience was excellent.

So let me say, once and for all, to e-reader manufacturers everywhere: You sell mobile devices! They need mobile web browsers! The mobile web is a rich and vibrant ecosystem, offering content specifically designed for your screens! Most of you use WebKit, even, which handles mobile websites incredibly well! Don’t fight it! Embrace it!

This is, in some ways, the core contradiction of the NOOKcolor. Even though it isn’t trying to be a mobile computer like the iPad or some of the other forthcoming Android tablets, the content that most clearly differentiates it from both its own E Ink past and other e-readers is still ten-inch content. There are workarounds, like zoom-ins and pop-out text on the children’s books and article mode for magazines, but they’re not as graceful as just being able to read text and images together at a normal, comfortable size.

Magazines, children’s books and the web are all more exciting and more readable at ten inches. So are textbooks, if Nook ever gets there. The iPad, Kno and Kindle DX all went big to try to make that screen content work.

NOOKcolor resists it, and there are good reasons for it. First, there is something ingenious about the 7″ form factor. It fits naturally in a coat pocket or purse. It’s easy to hold, as I mentioned above. And it works really, really well for most books.

Barnes & Noble’s customers don’t want to have more than one e-reader or tablet. They want access to color, the web, magazines, but don’t want to have a separate device in order to make full use of it. And while I might have fretted about the tiny text on the children’s books, my three-year-old son didn’t care. He loved it and buried his face in it closer.

NOOKcolor may not make anyone with skin in the mobile media reader game happy. It doesn’t have the 3G connectivity or battery life of the Kindle, which makes it harder for road warriors. Even though it’s an Android tablet, it doesn’t have full access to the Android market. It doesn’t have the giant screen and computing power of an iPad.

Do you know who that leaves? Everyone else. Millions and millions of people — who have a phone and a PC, who don’t scour the web for tech news, and for whom a device that costs $250 that does a little bit of everything pretty well and a subset of things extremely well is extremely compelling proposition.

I have two hopes for it, and two suggestions for Barnes & Noble. First, embrace the mobile web. Second, if NOOKcolor does extremely well, think about making an XL version. If you can come in below $400, I’ll buy it. I think a lot of people would.

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Nookcolor From Barnes & Noble Starts Shipping

Barnes & Noble this week began shipping its new Nookcolor
eBook reader ahead of schedule for all those users who pre-ordered the device.
The color touchscreen reader will begin arriving today. Barnes & Noble
stores will also be getting readers for customer demos and “very limited
quantities” for purchase.

The reader, which was announced at an event on Octover 26th,
features a seven-inch color touchscreen. According to the company, the Nookcolor
“has quickly become the bestselling product at Barnes & Noble with
pre-order volume significantly beyond that of the company’s aggressive
expectations.”

The device runs $249. Its predecessors, the Nook 3G and
Wi-Fi, will be getting firmware upgrades next week. 

NOOKcolor Preorders Shipping, Demos Available In Store Today

The first NOOKcolor demo units hit Barnes & Noble stores today, while customers who didn’t need to see one in person will get their preordered tablets this week.

“NOOKcolor is the device for people who love to read everything,” said Barnes & Noble CEO William Lynch. “Beyond being the most full featured reading product on the market, it also offers the versatility of a tablet, enabling wireless web browsing and streaming music.”

Demo units will also be coming to Best Buy, Walmart and Books-A-Million stores beginning this week. But Barnes & Noble has something special for customers at the Nook Boutiques in B&N stores: a white-glove service personal device set-up service called NOOKsmart, Book Ready.

“We’re encouraged by the consumer response thus far, and the organization is committed to doing everything we can to meet demand,” Lynch added. The target date for general availability remains November 19th.

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Barnes & Noble Nook Color Review: A Screen Caught Between Two Worlds [Video]

Tablets, tablets everywhere—even where you least expect them. So here’s a question: Is Barnes & Noble‘s Nook Color a tablet or an ereader? It’s actually something in between. And it’s only $250… More »

Galaxy Tab hitting AT&T on November 21st for a $649 premium?

It’s not official but that image above sure as hell looks like an official AT&T training document. AT&T already announced that it would carry the Samsung Galaxy Tab but has been coy with details about launch date, pricing, and custom apps. Now, if the screengrab above can be believed, we know that it’ll hit AT&T shops on November 21st for a “HQ recommended” price of $649.99 without contract and featuring the same data plans (250MB for $14.99 per month or 2GB for $25 per month) AT&T offers alongside its $629 16GB WiFi + 3G iPad offering. Right, that’s 20 bucks and change more for half the display and $50 more than the base price of T-Mobile’s or Verizon’s Galaxy Tab offering. Of course, AT&T will preinstall the Nook eReader and the AT&T Account Manager app for on-device activation and monthly credit refills. Not sure that’s worth the premium though. Hold tight to see how this plays out as we should see an official pricing and launch date announcement any day now.

[Thanks, tipster]

Galaxy Tab hitting AT&T on November 21st for a $649 premium? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Nov 2010 03:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hands-On With The Chunky, Unbreakable 3Feet Tablet Stand

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The 3Feet is an almost-indestructible, over-engineered plastic stand for pretty much any tablet or smartphone that needs a one. I tried one out, and found that maybe the best thing about it isn’t the capable range of tablet-cosseting features, but the fact that you can tinker and play with it for minutes on end.

The stand consists of five separate parts, all of which slot together with various deviously-conceived hingeing mechanisms. Thankfully, it comes pre-assembled, otherwise you’d likely mistake it for an impossible-to-solve puzzle and spend hours trying to put it together. In use, though, the 3Feet is very simple. You pull a tab on the back (marked “pull”) and it opens up into an A-frame, much like a tiny easel. Slots and rods molded into the plastic fit together to allow two angles, and a little lugged shelf folds down from the front to grab the bottom edge of the tablet.

This fold-open lip is oversized for the iPad, which means you can easily use it even whilst in a case (there is also a hole through which the charging cable can pass). It also means you’re not limited to the iPad: you can drop in pretty much anything, from a cellphone to a Kindle. The stand is sturdy enough to keep even the relatively heavy iPad safe in both portrait and landscape orientations.

The stability is helped by rubber bands made from silicone, which stop it sliding across the desk and also keep the happy tablet scratch-free (although the plastic stand probably wouldn’t damage much anyway).

The final trick is in a little kick-stand which flips out from the back when the main “leg” is folded flat. It is small, but somehow manages to both hold the stand at the right angle for on-screen typing, and also be sturdy enough to keep the iPad steady.

There’s not much to criticize about the 3Feet stand. It is light enough and compact enough that you can toss it in a bag and forget about it, and it’s even dishwasher-safe. And the complex folding design means you probably won’t be able to stop playing and fiddling with the thing. Hell, it’s even cheap, at just $15, and comes in a wide range of (interchangeable) colors.

The only thing that might put you off is the looks. This is a product for which the term “utilitarian” was invented. That’s not to say it is ugly, or even that the appearance hasn’t been considered. I can’t quite put my finger on it, but somehow it reminds me of medical devices, or perhaps even the toys of my childhood, which tended to be chunky and long-lasting rather than stylish and short-lived.

Or maybe I’m just seduced by the fact that this makes the ultimate executive stress-toy, something to keep your hands and brain busy when you should be working. Available now, from Amazon.

3Feet product page [3Feet. Thanks, Steve!]

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Nook Color processor revealed: ARM Cortex A8-based TI OMAP3621

Barnes & Noble provided most of the specs for the Nook Color when it launched the device on Tuesday, but notably absent was any word on the processor that powers the e-reader. Thankfully, Texas Instruments has now come out confirmed that the Nook Color uses its ARM Cortex A8-based, 45nm OMAP3621 processor (still no word on the speed). What’s more, the processor is actually part of TI’s eBook Development Platform, which the Nook Color also relies on. That’s particularly interesting considering that the processor and platform support a few features that the Nook Color does not, not the least of which is 3G connectivity. Of course, that doesn’t necessarily mean we’ll see a future Nook Color that takes advantage of those features, but at least we know it’s not too much of a stretch for Barnes & Noble to add them.

Update: Texas Instruments pinged us to say the chip within the Nook Color hums along at 800MHz.

Nook Color processor revealed: ARM Cortex A8-based TI OMAP3621 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Oct 2010 14:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Barnes & Noble Aims to Bring Color to E-Books

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Photo: Tim Carmody/Wired.com.

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NEW YORK — Barnes & Noble’s Nook Color is real. For $250, it may even be spectacular. Readers will find out for themselves sometime around Nov. 19.

“Our customers snack on content of all kinds all day,” Barnes & Noble CEO William Lynch said in a press conference announcing the device. He called the new Nook Color “the first reader’s tablet.”

The bookseller’s second-generation e-reader takes aim at both Amazon and entry-level Android tablets. Like its predecessor, the Nook Color is powered by Android. But this e-reader gives Google’s OS a bit more of a workout, ditching the low-power, monochrome E Ink display and the two-screen interface of the original Nook.

Instead, it’s got a 7-inch color LCD touchscreen made by LG. The screen technology is called “VividView” and incorporates an anti-glare coating, but is otherwise far closer to a tablet display than an e-book reader like the Kindle.

In related e-book reader news, Amazon announced Tuesday that the Kindle would be gaining a strictly limited e-book lending feature similar to what the B&N Nook has. That’s a remarkable about-face for Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos.

This graduates the Nook from dedicated e-reader to personal media player, if not quite a full tablet computer. In addition to Barnes & Noble’s current library of EPUB-derived black-and-white e-books, the Nook Color will be able to display color books, photos and games, multimedia-enhanced e-books, a good chunk of the web and even video.

Opportunities to test out the new Nook Color were very limited. Barnes & Noble did not give reporters unfettered access to the device. Most of the press conference centered on giant mockups on the screen.

The first showpieces for Nook Color will be magazines and newspapers. Barnes & Noble has partnered with Condé Nast (parent company of Wired magazine and Wired.com) and Hearst to offer magazines as both single issues and as subscriptions. (Apple lets publishers sell tablet magazines for its iPad, but hasn’t sorted out subscriptions just yet.)

B&N is also inviting other developers to create interactive color reading content specifically for Nook Color. The company is starting a program for developers to create Android applications specifically for the new device, to be offered in the Nook store. At launch, the Applications section will offer Pandora for streaming music, a handful of games like chess and sudoku, and a gallery application for viewing photos and video.

You’ll also be able to upload media by mounting the Nook Color as a hard drive on your PC’s desktop (using a USB cable) and doing a drag-and-drop. It will support MP3 and AAC audio and MP4 video.

When you also consider the recently announced Nook Kids store for children’s books, Barnes & Noble’s strategy is clear: Flank Amazon, Apple and other Android devices by offering formats and genres at the seams, which the other devices’ hardware and marketplace models have difficulty handling. While Apple’s hardware offers vivid color and interactivity, and Amazon’s store is flush with books and periodicals, Nook Color will have both.

Nook Color will also leverage its Wi-Fi connection to integrate reading with popular social networks. Readers will be able to share comments and excerpts from books, newspapers or magazines by e-mail, Facebook or Twitter, by opening up a submenu while viewing a document.

The interface will be familiar to existing Nook readers. In its default view, the library scrolls along the bottom quarter of the screen (where the old LCD touchscreen used to be), although you can also navigate in full screen.

Barnes & Noble was able to keep the device fairly lightweight: The Yves Béhar design weighs less than a pound and comes in at just one-half-inch thick. It will have 8 GB of internal storage and a microSD port for additional memory.

The battery life predictably suffers from supporting an LCD color screen, but Barnes & Noble claims it will still get around 8 hours of reading time.

There are some things the Nook Color won’t do. There’s no 3G option, which saves you some money and Barnes & Noble a lot, but does limit your ability to buy a book on a whim at an airport or hotel. It won’t have access to the Android Market or have the ability to run applications originally designed for other Android devices. You’ll be stuck with the apps Barnes & Noble’s picks, unless you opt to root/jailbreak your device.

Barnes & Noble’s Nook has been available for less than a year, but it’s quickly established itself as a solid competitor to the Kindle, capturing 20 percent of the e-book retail market, a worthy Pepsi to Amazon’s Coke.

The company has leveraged its in-store presence and customer base, building Nook boutiques in stores, and offering free Wi-Fi and book browsing there. It’s also branched out from its own stores, selling its reader online, and at other retailers like Wal-Mart and Best Buy. The company plans to continue that wide retail availability with Nook Color.

Barnes & Noble plans to continue selling the original Nook as an entry-level black-and-white E Ink reader for $150 and $200, and it promises to continue to support and enhance the original device.

It’s clear, though, that Barnes & Noble is thinking of E Ink readers as a “segment of the e-reading market,” to borrow a phrase its executives used over and over again. Its bet is on interactive color as the e-reading standard of the future.

When asked whether Nook Color would cannibalize Barnes & Noble’s sales of print books, Lynch pointed to data suggesting that current Nook owners were actually buying more print books from Barnes & Noble.

“We plan to cannibalize other people’s physical book sales more than our own,” he added.

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