Apr 14 2009

Electronic ink + flexible screens = wireless

Thanks to Amazon.com’s Kindle, the e-book reader has gone from a niche curiosity to a mainstream, oft-cited technology in a little more than a year. But now buzz is snapping and crackling about a second wave of electronic readers coming down the pike to give Amazon a run for its undisclosed monies.

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Apr 14 2009

Amazon Kindle 2’s Fuzzy Fonts Have Users Seeing Red

Amazon’s Kindle 2 is slimmer, faster and has longer battery life than its predecessor. But the newly launched e-book reader falls short when it comes to how well it displays text, say some users.

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Apr 13 2009

Was the Amazon De-listing Situation a Glitch Or a Hack?

Miracle Jones writes “As Amazon struggles to re-list and re-rank gay, lesbian, and adult books on their website after massive public outcry against the secretive partitioning process, they are claiming that the entire situation was not the result of an intentional policy at all, are not apologizing, and are instead insisting that the situation was the result of ‘a glitch’ that they are now trying to fix. While some hackers are claiming credit for ‘amazonfail,’ and it is indeed possible that an outside party is responsible, most claims have already been debunked. How likely is it that Amazon was hacked versus the likelihood of an internal Easter weekend glitch? Or is the most obvious and likely scenario true, and Amazon simply got caught implementing a wildly-unpopular new policy without telling anyone?”

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Apr 12 2009

Amazon Culls "Offensive" Books From Search System

Miracle Jones writes “Amazon has instituted an overnight policy that removes books that may be deemed offensive from their search system, despite the sales rank of the book and also irrespective of any complaints. Bloggers such as Ed Champion are calling for a ‘link and book boycott,’ asking people to remove links to Amazon from their web pages and stop buying books from them until the policy is reversed. Will this be bad business for Amazon, or will there new policies keep them out of trouble as they continue to grow and replace bookstores?”

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Apr 11 2009

Sharing Lives As Stories On the Web

blackbearnh writes “Jeff Holden spent a decade at Amazon, where he was involved as Senior Vice President of Consumer Websites with the recommendation engine, Amazon Prime, and the product review system. He’s left now, and has started Pelago, a company that wants to help mobile users turn their lives into stories they can share on the web. Among the interesting effects he discusses in this interview for O’Reilly Radar is that users of their product, Whrrl, have talked about changing their lives to make more interesting stories. Holden also talks about some of the work he did at Amazon, privacy issues that arise when social networking starts to become ubiquitous, and why he thinks the Apple App Store review system is seriously broken. ‘One of the things that happens with an iPhone is when you uninstall an app, it asks you to rate it. And it defaults to one-star. … The problem is … there’s no kind of qualification. Anybody just downloads it and checks it out or doesn’t check it out, right? And I think a number of people run it and they see that you have to sign in and they just delete it. And you get a one-star rating out of those experiences.'”

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Apr 7 2009

Apple Shifts iTunes Pricing; $0.69 Tracks MIA

Hodejo1 writes “Steve Jobs vowed weeks ago that when iTunes shifted to a tiered price structure in April, older tracks priced at {content}.69 would outnumber the contemporary hits that are rising to .29. Today, several weeks later, iTunes made the transition. While the .29 tracks are immediately visible, locating cheaper tracks is proving to be an exercise in futility. With the exception of 48 songs that Apple has placed on the iTunes main page, {content}.69 downloads are a scarce commodity. MP3 Newswire tried to methodically drill down to unearth more of them only to find: 1) A download like Heart’s 34-year-old song Barracuda went up to .29, not down. 2) Obscure ’90s Brit pop and ’50s rockabilly artists — those most likely to benefit from a price drop — remained at {content}.99. 3) Collected tracks from a cross-section of 1920s, ’30s, and ’40s artists all remained at {content}.99. Finally, MP3 Newswire called up tracks in the public domain from an artist named Ada Jones who first recorded in 1893 on Edison cylinder technology. The price on all of the century-old, public-domain tracks remained at {content}.99. (The same tracks are available for free on archive.org.) The scarcity of lower-priced tracks may reflect the fact that the labels themselves decide which price tier they want to pursue for a given artist; and they are mostly ignoring the lower tier. Meanwhile, Amazon’s UK site has decided to counter-promote their service by dropping prices on select tracks to 29 pence ({content}.42).”

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Apr 7 2009

iTunes top tracks $1.29, Amazon $0.99: thanks record labels

As promised, variable pricing has now been implemented at the iTunes music store. Already, we’re seeing most of top 10 singles and 33 of the top 100 hitting the top price-point of .29 (encoded as DRM-free 256kbps AAC). Interesting as Amazon’s uncomfortably similar top 10 list has all these tracks priced at {content}.99 (encoded as DRM-free 256kbps…

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Apr 6 2009

Netscape Alums Tackle Cloud Storage

BobB-nw writes “A new cloud storage vendor is entering the market, promising an enterprise-class file system with snapshots, replication, and other features designed to simplify adoption for existing users and applications. Zetta, founded in 2007 by veterans of Netscape, has million in funding and is coming out of stealth mode Monday with Enterprise Cloud Storage, a Web-based storage platform that will compete against Amazon’s Simple Storage Service and a growing number of cloud vendors. Zetta’s goal was to build a Web-based storage system that would be accepted by enterprise IT professionals for storing primary data. ‘Data growth rates are staggering. In businesses you see growth rates of 40 to 60 percent year over year,’ says CEO Jeff Treuhaft, a Zetta cofounder and formerly one of Netscape’s first employees. Another Zetta cofounder is Lou Montulli, an early Netscape employee who invented Web cookies.”

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Mar 31 2009

Questions Linger Over Google Book Rights Registry

We’ve discussed the fallout from Google’s settlement with the Authors Guild a few times already. Now the issue is made pointed again by a Wall Street Journal editorial claiming that the settlement will ruin a functioning copyright system if it is finally ratified, as expected, in June by a federal court. Reader daretoeatapeach writes: “In the US this will establish a Book Rights Registry where authors can opt-in to 63% of the revenues of each book, the rest going to Google. While previously Amazon had cornered the market on e-books, Google’s partnership with Sony will create a serious dent: 500,000 books to Amazon’s 250,000. Though Google is currently only releasing the books that are in the public domain, they ultimately plan to sell the 7 million e-books they’ve scanned (and counting). This raises a lot of questions about the future of publishing: Do we want only one company (e.g. Google) controlling access to information? Should publishers get a cut of the money, at least as long as their book is being scanned? Will broader access to trade journals affect their relationship and reliance on libraries? If, in the future, more authors opt out of the traditional publishing model, when will this hit the ‘recession-proof’ book industry? And has the publishing industry learned any lessons from MP3s?”

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Mar 30 2009

Command Lines and the Future of Firefox

Barence writes “Mozilla has revealed how it plans to integrate plain text commands directly into future versions of Firefox. Dubbed Taskfox, the move sees Mozilla’s Ubiquity project become part of the browser itself, allowing users to type commands directly into the address bar. You can, for example, type ‘map cleveland street london’ to bring up a Google Map of that location, or ‘amazon-search the great gatsby’ to find that book on Amazon, without visiting the website directly. ‘The basic idea behind Taskfox is simple: take the time-saving ideas behind Ubiquity, and put them into Firefox,’ the Taskfox wiki claims. ‘That means allowing users to quickly access information and perform tasks that would normally take several steps to complete.'”

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