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Posts Tagged ‘ Nook ’

The E-Reader Price Wars Heat Up

By on August 27, 2010

By Melissa J. Perenson
August 27, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO – The battle for tech-savvy bookworms is on, with Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Sony competing to sell e-book reader hardware. And as the major players struggle for better position in the electronic-publishing industry, recent months have seen price drops, new devices, and defeats.

Competition stepped up in June when a price war broke out. First Barnes & Noble slashed the price of its Nook by $60, down to $199; the company also started selling a Wi-Fi-only Nook for $149. Within hours Amazon dropped the price of its Kindle by $70, to $189. And ten days later, Sony cut the price of each of its three Reader products by $30, bringing its most expensive 3G version down to $229.

What’s sparking e-reader price drops? Thank Apple’s iPad, the dominant multipurpose tablet available today–and the juggernaut that has the major single-purpose e-reader makers quaking. In the face of this competition, other e-reader manufacturers have thrown in the towel. Plastic Logic has dumped plans to launch its QUE e-reader, and says that it will instead focus on creating a next-generation ProReader. Samsung delayed its e-readers indefinitely.

The e-reader is at a crossroads. Amazon and other companies must make the case that their dedicated products have a place in a world filled with multipurpose devices that can display e-books, such as smartphones, tablets, and netbooks. Each e-reader maker also wants to ensure that its product becomes the de facto standard for reading e-books. After all, repeat sales of e-books look to be where the real money is. Selling e-reader hardware with hooks to e-bookstores is more critical now than ever.

Market research firm The Yankee Group forecasts that 6 million e-readers will ship in 2010; that number is expected to grow to 19.2 million by 2013. And experts say e-book sales will follow the same growth curve.

E-books represent a fraction of overall publishing sales, but it’s a growing share: The Association of American Publishers says that though e-book sales for the month of May totaled just $29.3 million, sales grew by 163 percent that month and have already increased by 207 percent in 2010 compared with 2009.

Amazon has said that 80 percent of its Kindle-book buyers own a physical Kindle; the other 20 percent are using one of Amazon’s apps for Android, BlackBerry, iPad, iPhone, Mac, or PC.

Single-Purpose vs. Multipurpose

The number one threat to e-readers is Apple’s wildly popular, $499 iPad. And as Android tablets surface, you can expect even more pressure on dedicated e-readers, which usually have a monochrome E Ink screen in lieu of tablets’ color LCDs.

Amazon has fired back, beefing up its software to include simple word games, and even providing an API for developers to create Kindle apps. In late July Amazon revealed its third-generation e-reader, still simply named Kindle, which has an enhanced display, faster navigation, and an entirely redesigned chassis. Though the 3G/Wi-Fi device costs $189, the Wi-Fi-only version is priced at an affordable $139.

Despite feature and application creep, Amazon and Barnes & Noble’s main arguments are sound ones to serious book lovers. First, black-and-white e-reader hardware provides a better environment for book reading than do color-LCD-based tablets. Second, whereas Apple’s iPad gets 10 hours of battery life, Amazon’s new Kindle is rated for up to three weeks of life with the 3G radio on. And the E Ink displays of e-readers are viewable in bright sunlight, unlike the iPad’s LCD.

Though Amazon has never shared hardware sales numbers, the company said this summer that its e-book sales have outpaced hardcover sales by 80 percent. It has also claimed that it owns 70 to 80 percent of the e-book sales market (an estimate that other market data supports; for example, author James Patterson sold 1.14 million e-books, of which 867,881 were Kindle books).

Barnes & Noble claims to be at 20 percent, and Apple says it has 22 percent of the e-book market. Though those numbers don’t add up, they do show that–for all of the players–the focus is less on hardware and more on the opportunity for ongoing e-book sales.

War Far From Over

Amazon may have solidified its leadership role among dedicated E Ink devices (the newest Kindle sold out within a week of its preorder offering), but the company still faces challenges from Barnes & Noble, Sony, and tablets such as Apple’s iPad and current and future Android tablets by Archos, Dell, Samsung, Velocity Micro, Verizon, and others.

What is clear at this point is that Amazon’s new Kindle will put pressure on the bevy of lesser-known e-reader brands (nearly a dozen, led by Aluratek, Bookeen, and Kobo) to respond with price drops. But none of these companies have done so yet–and given how tight their profit margins seem to be, smaller e-reader makers may not be able to match the aggressive pricing of Amazon and Barnes & Noble.

More competitors have promised e-readers of their own. Later this year Sharp will introduce an e-book reader device that can read a new, proprietary e-publishing file format. Sharp says the device will be available in Japan first; sometime afterward, Sharp and its partner Verizon Wireless will launch the e-book reader in the United States.
The debut of the $139 Wi-Fi Kindle raises one key question: Does the value proposition of lesser-known, budget e-readers still exist? The short answer is no. Smaller brands have little to offer: Their hardware (as is the case with the $139 Kobo) is often inelegant and harder to use, they lack Wi-Fi or 3G connectivity, and they make acquiring books more difficult than it is on the Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Sony devices, each of which has built-in bookstore access.

The third-gen Kindle reshapes the e-reader landscape. Considering its features, one potential e-reader vendor’s spokesperson said off the record: “At that price, who can compete?”

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By David Coursey
March 24, 2010

ipadvskindleSAN FRANCISCO – Amazon has posted a preview of the future of e-books, its Kindle e-reader app for Apple’s forthcoming iPad. Amazon, the top e-book reseller, is teaming its e-book format with the most anticipated tablet device we’ve seen so far. Altogether, that will almost certainly make the iPad the world’s top e-reader when deliveries begin April 3.

If this all works out–and where Apple and mobile apps are concerned, you can never be too sure–this could make the iPad attractive to everyone who owns and Kindle but wishes they could do more with it. It also makes Apple interesting to people, like me, who want an e-reader but never seriously considered an iPad.

Sadly, I am already wondering whether this marriage of convenience can be saved.

First, it’s not clear Apple whether has even approved Amazon’s Kindle app for iPad and its associated e-bookstore. It is not beyond possibility that Amazon has not received approval and is, essentially, playing chicken with Apple. Or maybe all is peaceful, the deal has been done, and Apple has suddenly learned how to play well with others.

Apple’s strong preference to have tight control over applications and content on its mobile devices is what makes the idea of a Kindle app and competing iPad bookstores seem so strange. Barnes & Noble has said it plans a Nook iPad app and store, too.

At some point, Amazon and B&N are almost certain to chafe under Apple’s reins. It’s not clear whether either bookseller really wants to be in the hardware business, but it would not be wise either to get out of it anytime soon.

Today, it makes sense, especially for Apple, to make the iPad compatible with the Kindle and Nook, but should Amazon and/or B&N get out of the hardware business, I can imagine compatibility could disappear fairly quickly, leaving Apple’s own iBooks store as the only option for the iPad.

I don’t think Apple sees a reason why Amazon or B&N should be allowed to live as e-book reseller, when Apple does so well with other content all by itself.

But there is a good reason for Apple to allow competition, and it presents itself in the form of the U.S. Dept. of Justice, which might step-in on the side of Amazon and B&N should Apple behave too aggressively.

E-book users should hope that Apple will understand the differences between its music and apps stores and selling e-Books online, as well as accept that a separate category of e-reader hardware will exist, mostly at lower price points than the iPad.

We can hope all that, but Apple getting along with sometime competitors is an uncommon thing.

Today, this cooperation looks like a shotgun wedding. Apple and the booksellers each have something the other needs. Apple needs content and e-book customers, while Amazon and B&N benefit from Apple’s hot new platform.

We’ll have to wait and see how long this lasts.

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Samsung Introduces eReader

By on March 11, 2010

By Robert S. Anthony
March 11, 2010

samsung_ereaderSAN FRANCISCO – At a splashy event in New York’s Time Warner Center, Samsung dove headlong into the electronic book market with the Samsung eReader, a $299 device which allows you to take notes in the margins and share content with other Samsung eReaders.

The slide-open unit features a six-inch, 600-by-800-pixel, 8-gray-scale electronic ink display and uses a magnetic resonance stylus instead of a touch screen. Samsung announced a relationship with Barnes and Noble which allows the eReader to access B&N’s arsenal of more than a million e-books and e-magazines as well as access to Google Books.

The unit can handle ePub, Adobe PDF, text, BMP, and JPG formats. In addition to 2GB of internal memory, enough for 1,500 books or 2,400 memos, it offers a microSD slot for additional storage capacity. The eReader offers Bluetooth 2.0 connectivity for wireless headsets and other wireless audio devices and a Wi-Fi adapter for Internet access.

One differentiator from the crowd of e-readers the Samsung model joins: With the eReader, you can write notes and annotations in the margins of an e-book just as you would in a physical book. Tim Baxter, president of the consumer electronics division at Samsung, also noted that the unit can share content wirelessly with other identical units. “Reading can be as personal or as social as you want it to be,” he said.

Even though Barnes & Noble offers its own e-Reader, Nook, Barnes & Noble doesn’t see a conflict, since the Samsung eReader would bring more users to the B&N e-book marketplace.

“We want to enable e-reading everywhere,” said Kevin Frain, executive vice president of e-commerce operations at Barnes & Noble.

He noted that the Samsung eReader would be completely compatible with the Barnes & Noble ebook marketplace, including the LendMe feature, which allows you to loan content to other eReader users for up to two weeks. The Samsung eReader will be sold at a number of retailers, but not Barnes & Noble, however.

In practice, when I tried the Samsung eReader’s electronic resonance stylus, I found it allowed for accurate text highlighting. However, I experienced a delay between the time I raised the stylus from the screen and the time the highlighting appeared.

Sliding the slim unit open revealed a center rocking navigation control flanked by two control buttons as well as twin speakers, which can be used with content that supports text-to-speech technology. The device also has a headphone jack, and can play MP3 files. The right side of the unit has a convenient volume control rocker, while the bottom has a miniUSB port for connecting with a computer.

The unit can read PDF files, but it can’t reflow PDF text. The eReader has a proprietary Outlook sync utility which allows you to import your calendar into the unit. The eReader can also wirelessly share content with other Samsung e-Readers either on a one-to-one basis or to a group of recipients.

Samsung says the eReader will be available soon at major retailers.

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By David Coursey
February 9, 2009

apple_ipad_full_2SAN FRANCISCO – The more people know about the iPad, the less they want to buy one, according to a study released Friday. But, are we expecting too much?

The study seems to confirm the iPad as Apple‘s least exciting announcement in years. And the company is feeling the backlash that comes from not delivering on the hype.

Retrevo, an online marketplace for consumer electronics, surveyed 1,000 of its customers and found that the iPad’s Jan. 27 announcement did more to snuff out customer interest than to spark it.

That’s not surprising when all Apple introduced was just a supersized (and superexpensive at the high end) iPod touch. My friend and fellow pundit Larry Magid described as the iPad as “underwhelming.”

I agree, the iPad is underwhelming, especially as a business device. And the more people heard about the iPad, the less they wanted one, according to Retrevo.

“The word definitely got out as the number of respondents saying they had heard about the tablet rose from 37% shortly before the announcement to over 80% after the media frenzy on January 27th,” Retrevo said Friday in a blog post.

“Unfortunately for Apple, the number if respondents saying they had heard about the tablet but were not interested in buying one, doubled from 25% before the announcement to over 50% following the announcement.”

Of course, that 50 percent who are interested is plenty to make the product a success, provided many of them actually become buyers. (Learn more about the study in this story by Greg Keizer).

I think we may be being a bit hard on the iPad. I still don’t think it will become a big enterprise computing tool, even if it does “run” Windows 7 (as a virtualized desktop). I also don’t think traditional mobile line-of-business applications–think your UPS driver–will start carrying iPads.

But, entertainment, gaming, and e-reading, especially in education, could still make the iPad quite a winner.

Apple already has the ecosystem in place–developers, content, shopping–to make the platform immediately useful when it arrives. The iPad appears to be an excellent e-reader, though I said that about the Nook before it shipped, too. In this case, however, enough pre-production iPads have been around that I feel pretty confident.

I still don’t feel the need for an iPad, but I do expect to invest in an e-reader soon and am glad I didn’t get a Nook for Christmas. Now, I want to wait a bit and see how the devices, content pricing, and content availability shake-out. At some future moment, the combination of e-reader features/content and interesting apps (not available on my iPhone) could convince me.

So, while I don’t see an iPad in my immediate future, I am closer to buying one–or perhaps a competitor–than I was before the announcement. I still wouldn’t say I want an iPad. But, I see how I might be convinced in the future.

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Apple Tablet: Content Will Be Key

By on January 21, 2010

By Ian Paul
January 21, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO – On January 27, Apple is holding an event to unveil its “latest creation,” which is expected to be a 10-inch touchscreen tablet. Apple’s rumored device has been generating a lot of buzz and excitement, but it’s not clear yet whether tablet excitement — assuming that Apple really is unveiling a tablet, of course — will turn into tablet dollars at the cash register.

One factor not working in Apple’s favor is that tablet devices have never proven to be successful with paying customers. Ken Delaney, an analyst at Gartner, recently told Bloomberg that tablet computers only account for one percent of the PC market despite being around since the 1990s. Granted, Apple’s device may look more like a large iPod Touch than the traditional tablet laptop with a swivel screen, but even so Apple will need more than just flashy hardware to make its tablet product successful.

Perhaps more than any other product the company has produced, the rumored tablet will need an ecosystem of compelling content to convince people they want to buy this device. But what would that look like?

iTunes LP and iTunes Extra

The most obvious use for a tablet would be for playing back music and video sold through the iTunes store. Just like your laptop, iPod, or iPhone, an Apple tablet would offer a way to watch movies and television shows and listen to music. The device may also convince people to buy albums with the iTunes LP feature, and movies with iTunes Extras, the DVD-like special features included with movies downloaded from Apple.
Applications

It’s not clear yet what kind of an operating system Apple’s latest creation will have. If it runs a standard version of OS X then the rumored tablet will run the same computer programs your Mac does, but if the device is running the iPhone OS that opens up Apple’s wide catalog of third-party iPhone applications available through the iTunes Store.

Games

Most iPod Touch and iPhone video games are controlled by the use of an accelerometer where you tip the device to one side or the other to manipulate on-screen movements. That may be a relatively easy thing to do on a handheld device with the flick of the wrist, but a 10-inch tablet would require you to grip the device with both hands much like you would with a steering wheel, which may not be as compelling for gaming. But there are some games, such as Madden NFL 10, that make use of on-screen controls that could be more interesting, and two-player games like Touch Hockey: FS5 would be far easier to play on a bigger screen. Of course, putting iPhone games on the tablet assumes the device would be running the iPhone OS and not Mac OS X.

Books

The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday morning that Apple is in talks with Harper Collins and other publishers to bring e-books to the rumored tablet device. But unlike books on the Kindle, Sony Reader, Nook, or any of the numerous e-readers announced at CES, books on Apple’s tablet may have interactive features including video, interviews and social networking. That may be a compelling format for a children’s book–imagine Maurice Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are with embedded clips from the movie–or business-oriented books that could benefit from interactive illustrations or news video, but do you really need interactivity when reading fiction? By my estimation you’d lose more than you’d gain reading works by John Steinbeck, Philip Roth, or Jonathan Safran Foer with interactive features.

Mags and Rags

There’s been a lot of buzz ever since Sports Illustrated unveiled its electronic magazine concept, and now there’s more news that The New York Times’ long-awaited second attempt at a paywall may be timed with Apple’s product announcement next week. Many other companies are also considering or working on new digital formats including Time Inc., News Corp., and Hearst. But there’s a big question mark hanging over the issue of whether people would be willing to pay for online content again.

About those paint splotches…

A rumor out yesterday, and first reported by Fox News, says that Apple may also be introducing new versions of iLife and a preview of iPhone OS 4.0. Is it possible that Apple’s new device will have some kind of artistic bent to it, as the company’s event invitation suggests? Could Apple’s new device be ideal for using iMovie, iPhoto or iWeb in new and interesting ways? Only a few days until we know for sure.

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By Melissa Perenson
January 12, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO – Let’s get the bad news about the Fujitsu FLEPia out of the way: Right now, it’s only available in Japan. The good news is that Fujitsu is looking into bringing it to the U.S. Hopefully, the company will do so soon, as this flexible e-paper reader looks very promising.
The FLEPia unit on display here was customized for showing off in the U.S., but its interface was clean and colorful (underneath was Windows CE). It has a 1.2 second refresh rate, and the lightning fast scrolling compared with the Kindle and Nook.

This slim (12.5mm thick), 350-gram model was especially attractive given its color display–a 8-inch passive matrix touch screen which supports 64, 260K, and 4096K colors. There’s no backlight, yet images could look bright and brilliant since the display is designed to reflect back red, green, and blue ambient light. Also, it only uses power while redrawing the screen, so Fujitsu claims that the FLEPia can last for 40 hours per charge.

The FLEPia’s connectivity options are also fairly impressive; a USB 2.0 port, SD card slot, and Internet access via Bluetooth and Wi-Fi. In Japan, the FLEPia works with different mobile carriers, so we’ll probably see a similar arrangement for a US release. Does all of that sound good? Be prepared to set aside around $1000, which is roughly what it cost during the April 2009 launch in Japan.

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