Julia Child Goes Electric: Mastering the Art of French Cooking E-Book This Week

Child’s 50-year-old classic will launch as an ebook this week

When it comes to media, these days I’m pretty much all digital, all the time. Books, TV, movies, music — nothing sinks into my brain without first running through an iPad or a Kindle. But in one area, I’m as much of a Luddite as my friend Jimmy (who “doesn’t believe in GPS”): cook books.

Why? Paper books are still way easier to browse than electronic. They’re also more resilient to splashes. And I must admit that even thought I’m not a “page sniffer” like Jimmy, I still like the physical nature of a pile of cookbooks. Maybe its because it signals to guests that I take cooking seriously.

But as with everything, cookbooks will end up on Kindles and iPads. This week, Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking will launch in electronic form. The publisher — Alfred A. Knopf — has tried to digitize the classic 1961 text once before, but internal politics and layout problems led to the project’s cancellation.

Child’s famous book isn’t the first electronic cookbook, of course. It’s not even the first of Child’s books to make it to the Kindle. But as a loved classic, it signals the final stage in the conversion of books from print to e-ink (or LCD screens).

It also highlights one of the big problems with bringing old manuscripts into the modern age. Despite being in print since the 60s, the publisher has never had the book in electronic form. The entire 762 pages had to be retyped.

Mastering the Art of French Cooking will launch Wednesday, for $20.

Adapting Julia Child for E-Readers [NYT. Thanks, Mr.Abell!]

See Also:


Remove Ads From ‘Special Offers’ Kindle for $30

Amazon lets you opt out of ‘Special Offers’ on your Kindle. For a price

So you bought a Kindle with “Special Offers.” Maybe you were a little light on cash. Maybe you thought the ads wouldn’t bother you. Maybe you figured the prospect of saving $30-$40 and never having to see that awful Emily Dickinson screensaver ever again was too good to be true. Whatever. I won’t judge. But I can point you to absolution.

Now Amazon will let you buy yourself out of your foolish mistake. Yes, you can remove the ads from an ad-supported Kindle — as long as you have $30. Nate Hoffelder of The Digital Reader explains how. It is in fact dead easy, with no begging, pleading calls to Amazon customer service required. You just visit the “Manage Your Devices” page at Amazon and de-register the ads. You pay $30 and you’re done.

This is great news, and means there’s little reason to buy anything other than the ad-supported Kindle. After all, if you like the ads, or they don’t bother you, then you just saved $30. And if you can’t stand them, or get a strange hankering to see the spooky Dickinson portrait again, you can fix things in seconds.

Amazon Charged me $30 to get the Adverts Off my K4 [The Digital Reader]

See Also:


Samsung ‘Fixie’ With Top-Tube Tablet Mount

Fixie Fashion: Samsung commissions ultimate Galaxy Tab dock

There’s some silly two-faced fashion going on over in London Town. Samsung, maker of me-too touch-screen devices, commissioned Brick Lane-based bike builder 14 Bike Co to make a bike and mount for its Galaxy Tab tablet.

In keeping with current fashions, the bicycle is a fixed gear model with obligatory Brooks saddle, and although it does actually have a pair of brakes, there are no cables or levers — kind of like a tablet that runs Flash, but doesn’t enable it by default. The bike is white on one side and black on the other, matching either Galaxy Tab colorway.

The tablet holder is fashioned from carbon fiber and dangles from a cylinder which grabs the top tube. Samsung says that this lets you flip up and use the Tab when on the bike, but it also means that the thing will flap from side to side whenever you turn a corner.

Ridiculous as this implementation is, tablet on a bike are actually a pretty good idea. The big screen and long, long battery life make the iPad a great handlebar HUD, GPS tracker and general mapping device. I currently tuck mine into a handlebar bag, but that means reaching in every time you need to use it. Better would be a proper handlebar mount.

I’m in the middle of building a touring bike (Surly Long Haul Trucker framer and Shimano Alfine 11 hub, as you’re asking) and I have a feeling that the iPad might neatly be stowed in the map-case attachment for the Ortlieb handlebar bag. Full report if that works out. In the meantime, ZooGue’s three-ring binder adapter for the iPad might let you replicate Samsung’s shenanigans yourself.

Samsung Bike [14 Bike Co via Bike Biz]

See Also:


How the Kindle Fire Could Make 7-Inch Tablets Huge

The Amazon Kindle Fire demos an electronic version of Wired Magazine. Photo: Victor J. Blue/Wired.com

Steve Jobs made it clear what he thought of 7-inch tablets in October 2010. They’re “too small,” and as good as “dead on arrival.” But the announcement of and anticipation surrounding Amazon’s Kindle Fire tablet may soon have Jobs eating his words.

If you’ve been living under a rock and haven’t heard the news, Amazon debuted its $200 7-inch tablet, the Kindle Fire, this week. Make no mistake: It’s no iPad. There’s no front-facing or rear-facing camera, and it’s only got 8 GB of storage.

But it’s not meant to be an iPad. It’s a completely different kind of tablet, designed for the pure consumer. That is, it’s designed for consumptive behavior: reading, listening to music, watching video content. The lack of local storage isn’t an issue, either; it’s meant to take advantage of the cloud with services like Amazon’s $80 yearly Prime service, as well as Amazon Cloud Drive. And the smaller form factor makes it extra portable, easy to whip out on the bus or the subway (much like a Kindle).

“With a 7-inch device, you can easily take your Kindle Fire with you and hold it in one hand for gaming and movie watching,” Amazon representative Kinley Campbell said via e-mail.

UX design consultant Greg Nudelman thinks that 7-inch tablets could become just as popular as larger 9.7 and 10.1-inch tablets, “but the types of applications and the context and length of use between might be very different.”

The iPad, although portable, is more difficult to manage with a single hand due to its larger size. And while it is certainly geared towards consumptive behavior, the iPad also strives to break the mobile-PC barrier by becoming a tool for creation, with programs like iMovie for iPad and GarageBand for iPad allowing users to produce content rather than just passively take it in. Whether it actually accomplishes that or not is subjective (some scoff at GarageBand’s limited capabilities), but it’s possible, and likely that more apps of this nature are in the pipeline (third-party produced or otherwise).

Amazon’s decision to debut a smaller-sized tablet was likely influenced by the players in the current tablet market. The 7-inch space has the least resistance, DisplaySearch’s Richard Shim says. Its direct competition is more likely to be the Barnes & Noble Nook Color, which also runs Android and touts a similar form factor, than Apple’s iPad.

That’s exactly what fueled Velocity, makers of the 7-inch Android-running Cruz tablet, to choose that size. “We wanted to avoid the head-to-head comparisons to the 10-inch iPad — ours is a very different product that goes after a different target customer,” marketing manager Josh Covington said.

The smaller size also allowed Amazon to more easily make a splash with a lower price point, something other 7-inch tablet manufacturers are going to have to mimic to stay competitive. Take HTC, which just dropped the price of its 7-inch Flyer tablet from an iPad-range $499 to a more affordable $299.

Samsung also jumped in on the hype, introducing its Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus on Friday. If Samsung can manage a similar price, the Kindle Fire could have another legitimate competitor.

And just in case it crosses your mind, a 7-inch tablet would not be something Apple would likely ever debut. Apple has been tremendously successful with its 9.7-inch iPad, which flew off shelves shortly after its debut and has continued solid sales since. Unless that changes for some reason, there isn’t a need for Apple to break out a smaller iPad, economically speaking.

It’s also not in Apple’s DNA. Since Steve Jobs jumped back on board with Apple in the late ’90s, Apple’s success has hinged on innovation, rather than riding on the heels of successful consumer reaction in markets it doesn’t have a presence in. Take the netbook market for example: Rather than releasing a netbook, Apple introduced the MacBook Air, and later of course, the iPad.

Part of what’s hindered the success of the 7-inch tablet, until now, is that they are perceived to be more like an over-sized mobile phone than a tablet, “and that appears to be the Achilles’ Heel of the mini-tablets,” Nudelman says.

But the genius of the Kindle Fire is that it’s more closely identified with Amazon’s popular e-reader line than with smartphones, so it has a clearly defined place within the user’s mind. And now that Amazon has made that distinction clear, other 7-inch tablet makers can at least attempt to capitalize on that extra portable, media-consumption angle, rather than marketing them against the iPad.

The Kindle Fire’s separation from both larger iPad-sized tablets and large-screened smartphones, both in size and in function, will help secure a solid niche for other 7-inch tablets to follow.


Pyramid-Shaped Tablet Makes Debut on The Office

The Office’s Dwight Schrute introduces a new tablet, The Pyramid. Image: NBC

On Thursday night’s episode of the NBC show The Office, viewers got a surprise laugh when character Dwight Schrute introduced us to Dunder Mifflin-Sabre’s new tablet, The Pyramid.

The unique three-sided tablet weighs in at “barely three pounds” without the optional battery back and memory booster. Without the booster, it has “50 L” of memory. I don’t imagine it features any cameras, dual-core processors or other fancy niceties. It does, however, sport a unique triangular shape that would make for a great desk corner paperweight or a terribly heavy boomerang.

If you missed it, you can watch the full episode on NBC’s website, or just check out the clip below.

Unleash the power of The Pyramid!


Amazon’s Android Tablet May Be the Best and Kill the Rest

Amazon Kindle Director Jay Marine uses the Amazon Fire in New York. Photo: Victor J. Blue/ Wired.com

The Kindle Fire could be the first truly successful Android tablet. It touts a very reasonable $200 price tag, a well-curated app store, easy access to Amazon’s cloud-based services, brand trust and recognition. It’s Amazon’s most ambitious foray into hardware since the original Kindle’s debut.

And the Fire has the potential to engulf all its Android tablet brethren.

To date, Android tablet sales have mostly been lackluster. The Motorola Xoom only shipped 440,000 units in its first three months. Samsung’s 7-inch Galaxy Tab fared better, hitting the one million mark before it had been on the market for two months. But there are countless other Android tablets, and none of them are making a big splash in the iPad-dominated space. Many have taken to slashing their prices just to make a tiny grab at the tablet market.

But the Kindle Fire has the ability to change all that.

The failing point of many existing 7-inch tablets as that they thought of the iPad as their competition. But a 7-inch “tweener,” as Steve Jobs dubbed it, is an inherently different device, and Amazon, with the Kindle Fire, has embraced that difference.

The Kindle Fire is a device created for content consumption, not creation — for reading, listening to music and watching video. As such, at least to start, it’ll rely heavily on Amazon’s own apps and services.

Whether Amazon’s 7-inch tablet fires up Android development will depend on the success of the device.

“It’s a bit of a chicken and egg problem,” Gartner analyst Van Baker says. If the tablet is successful with consumers, then it will spur Android tablet development.

But it really doesn’t look like the Kindle Fire will have any problems being successful.

Forrester analyst Sarah Rotman-Epps expects “rapidfire adoption” of the tablet, which will finally give developers a reason to develop tablet apps. Elaine Coleman of Resolve Market Research shares a similar sentiment. The Kindle Fire will elevate Android app development because Amazon has already done such a standout job of establishing itself in the space with customers, and the Kindle Fire has direct access to its built-in app store.

“This will finally give mobile app developers a much stronger alternative and opportunity to develop their apps beyond the Apple App Store,” Coleman says.

What do developers think? Reviews are mixed.

“The Amazon Kindle Fire looks like an amazing product,” says Eric Setton, co-founder and CTO of Tango. As Tango is a video calling service, his product won’t be compatible until Amazon outs a tablet with a front facing camera.

Michael Novak, an Android developer with the GroupMe team, has a number of reservations.

Novak is disappointed that the Kindle Fire supports Gingerbread, rather than Honeycomb, Android’s tablet-specific build. It’s not a big issue, because Google has a compatibility library, but he still feels it’s a let down. He’s also more excited about developing for a 10-inch screen, like that of the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1. Unlike in iOS development, he notes that developers need to pay close attention to user experience on these different-sized screens to ensure they take advantage of all each device has to offer.

Novak is also concerned that the tablet ships with Amazon’s app store — he currently sees far fewer downloads of his app from the Amazon app store than from the Android Market (and also far fewer downloads on tablets compared to smartphones), but perhaps that will change when Amazon’s own tablet starts landing in households.

And existing Android tablets better watch out when they do.

“The Kindle Fire will definitely harm the sales of other Android tablets,” says Baker. So far, 7-inch tablet sales have not been doing well, he says, but what we’ve largely had so far is a piece of hardware without any services behind it. Manufacturers are focused on the hardware features and specs, but that’s not what consumers care about. Consumers want the full ecosystem, something Apple, and now Amazon, are able to provide.

Amazon is bringing far more to the table than its competitors, and will likely dominate the 7-inch tablet market and drive competitors’ prices down. It will also force competitors to adopt more cloud-based services, Coleman says.

The Kindle Fire should give the Android platform a major boost, while simultaneously killing off its many players.


Old Kindle Renamed ‘Kindle Keyboard,’ New Touch Just $10 Cheaper Than Fire

The ‘Kindle Keyboard’ has gotten a new name and price, but how long will it stick around?

I have no idea why you’d want to buy it, unless you do a lot of typing whilst reading a book, but the Kindle 3 has not only survived the keyboard-culling bloodbath that happened in New York yesterday, it has gotten a new, cheaper price.

$40 is the discount Amazon has settled on if you choose to accept ads on the new Kindles, and $40 is what Amazon has now lopped off the price of what is now called the Kindle Keyboard. The non ad-supported Kindle Keyboard is the same $140 as before.

Despite the name change, I have a feeling that these Kindles will be killed once production on the new models is going at full speed. Just take a look at their place in the lineup. To avoid things from becoming even more confusing, we’ll look only at the ad-supported prices, which is the new default positioning from Amazon. To remove ads from any of these, just add $40.

The cheapest Kindle is now the $80 Kindle. This lacks a keyboard (you “type” by moving a cursor over an on-screen keyboard using the d-pad) and has Wi-Fi only.

The Kindle Touch is $100, the same price as the Kindle Keyboard. The Kindle Touch 3G is $150, whereas the Kindle Keyboard 3G is $10 less, at $140. Weird, right? And certainly confusing, with models sharing price points.

But the oddest thing of all is the difference between the top-end e-ink Kindle and the color Kindle Fire when ads are taken out (there is no ad-supported Fire). The ad-free Kindle Touch 3G is $190. The Fire is $200. That tiny $10 difference is the best proof yet that Amazon is heavily subsidizing the Fire hardware to get the price down.

And this is something Amazon can easily afford to do because, unlike Samsung, Motorola and other Android tablet makers, Amazon will continue to make money on every Fire after it is sold. Movies, books, music: everything the average user puts on their Fire will be bought from Amazon. There’s no way other manufacturers can compete. Who the hell is going to buy a 7-inch Galaxy Tab now?

Kindle Comparison page [Amazon]

See Also:


Pulse Newsreader Coming to Kindle Fire

Pulse running on a Kindle Fire

Despite Amazon’s curious decision to make the Kindle Fire a tall, thin tablet, it’s clearly made for reading. And news-hounds will be happy to see that the popular iOS and Android newsreader Pulse is coming to Fire.

Pulse pulls in your news feeds from Google Reader and shows articles to you in a very pretty grid of images. It will also pull in links from other sources like Facebook, Reddit, YouTube and Digg (remember Digg?)

Pulse is actually already available for Android, and can be had for free from Amazon’s Android app store. What’s most interesting is that Pulse, the company, is pushing this as if it were a new release for Kindle Fire. I expect this to happen a lot. In fact, given the expected success of Amazon’s $200 tablet, the Amazon app store will likely become the most important Android app store, quickly surpassing Google’s Android Market.

It may also make Android a better place for developers. Right now, most Android owners have their phones because they were the cheapest phone at the carrier’s store, and they don’t really use them as mini computers the way iPhone users do. And they sure don’t pay for apps.

The Kindle Fire, on the other hand, is designed to sell you stuff. People will buy it because they want to spend money, and Amazon will make it easy: The thing will arrive at your door already signed in to your Amazon account. Even Apple’s devices don’t do that.

Expect the Android software world to get a lot more interesting this November.

Pulse News product page [Amazon app store. Thanks, Jeff!]

See Also:


First Look: Up Close and Personal With Amazon’s Kindle Fire

<< Previous
|
Next >>


A demo of the Amazon Fire, a new tablet device, at an Amazon.com event in New York, NY, Wednesday September 28, 2011. Photo: Victor J. Blue/ Wired.com


Amazon dropped a bomb on the mobile industry on Wednesday morning; four of them, to be exact. Three brand-new Kindle e-reader smart missiles — which aim to dominate the e-ink publishing industry — and one big-ass nuke: the Kindle Fire.

Wired.com was at the announcement in New York on Wednesday morning, and we got the chance to take a first look at the devices in action.

<< Previous
|
Next >>

All Photos: Victor J. Blue/Wired.com


Wacom Bamboo Tablets Go Wireless

An optional set of wireless dongles cuts the cord. They’re not as big as they appear in the photo

Wacom has just revamped its Bamboo tablet lineup, replacing the current Touch, Pen and Pen & Touch models with the Bamboos Connect, Capture and Create.

These new names will take a little more explaining than the old ones.

The entry level Connect ($80) is a pen-only model, a little larger than an iPad, and with a smaller bezel and thinner body than the previous Bamboos.

The Capture is the same size, but adds multitouch and the option to go wireless. This is done with an add-on set of dongles (one for the tablet, one for the computer) and a battery pack. This pack costs another $40 on the $100 price of the Capture.

The $200 Create is essentially a bigger version of the Capture, with multi-touch, wireless option and a large 8.5 x 5.4-inch touch area (and a 13.8 x 8.2-inch).

I used to use Wacom tablets all the time, back in another life as a graphic designer. I have the now-previous generation Pen & Touch, but almost never use it thanks to my dual Magic Trackpad setup. For editing photos and drawing on the computer, though, there’s really nothing like a proper tablet, and Wacom’s are still the best. Aside from their horrible driver software, that is.

All three tablets are available now.

Bamboos Tablets [Wacom via Electronista]

See Also: