May 5 2009

Amazon Wins First Kindle Patent; Bigger Screen Expected Soon

An anonymous reader writes “One day before Amazon is scheduled to unveil its widescreen Kindle aimed at newspaper readers, the e-commerce giant has been awarded its first US patent for an e-book reader. The new patent, D591,741, is a design patent which protects the look and feel of the Kindle shell, not for fundamental technologies. Those patents are mostly held by E Ink Corp., which makes the ‘liquidless paper’ display. Sony, IBM, and the Discovery cable TV network also have e-book patents. Amazon, though the leading e-book seller, has none, but the patent award indicates they’ve applied for at least four recently.” Also in Kindle news, PC World has a brief article up on the larger-screen Kindle DX (expected to launch Wednesday), including pictures first spotted on Engadget.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 5 2009

Classic Books of Science?

half_cocked_jack writes “What are the classic books of science from throughout history? I’m currently reading On the Origin of Species on my Kindle 2, and it’s sparked an interest in digging up some of the classic books of science. I’m looking for books from the ancient and medieval worlds and books from the golden ages of scientific discovery. Books like: Galileo’s The Starry Messenger; Newton’s Principia; Copernicus’s On The Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres; and Faraday’s The Chemical History of a Candle. I know that I can likely find these books in a format I can use on my Kindle (found a few on Gutenberg already), but what I need is a checklist of these books to guide my reading. Suggestions?”

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May 5 2009

Amazon Kindle DX photos leak out!

We just got some blurry photos and specs for the new, decidedly more newspaper- and college textbook-friendly Amazon Kindle DX. Here’s what we know: it’s got a 9.7-inch display (as opposed to the current six-inch unit), a long-requested built-in PDF reader, and the ability to add annotations in addition to notes and highlights.


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May 4 2009

Big-screen Kindle coming from Amazon this week

Go ahead and grab the salt shaker, ’cause this one’s nowhere near carved in stone… or is it? A breaking report from The New York Times has it that Amazon will introduce a larger version of its Kindle e-reader “as early as this week,” one that’s tailored for “displaying newspapers, magazines and perhaps textbooks.”


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May 4 2009

Can the New Digital Readers Save the Newspapers?

Hugh Pickens writes “The NY Times reports that several companies plan to introduce digital newspaper readers by the end of the year with screens roughly the size of a standard sheet of paper to present much of the editorial and advertising content of traditional periodicals in generally the same format as they appear in print. Publishers hope the new readers may be a way to get readers to pay for those periodicals — something they have been reluctant to do on the Web, while allowing publishers to save millions on the cost of printing and distributing their publications, at precisely a time when their businesses are under historic levels of pressure from the loss of readers and advertising. “We are looking at this with a great deal of interest,” said John Ridding, the chief executive of the 121-year-old British newspaper The Financial Times. “The severe double whammy of the recession and the structural shift to the Internet has created an urgency that has rightly focused attention on these devices.” The new tablets will start with some serious shortcomings: the screens, which are currently in the Kindle and Sony Reader, display no color or video and update images at a slower rate than traditional computer screens. But many think the E-ink readers are simply too little, too late and have not appeared in time to save the troubled realm of print media. “If these devices had been ready for the general consumer market five years ago, we probably could have taken advantage of them quickly,” said Roger Fidler, the program director for digital publishing at the University of Missouri, Columbia. “Now the earliest we might see large-scale consumer adoption is next year, and unlike the iPod it’s going to be a slower process migrating people from print to the device.””

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 3 2009

Samsung Papyrus E-Book Reader, Coming Soon

kanewm writes with a snippet from Portable-Ebook-Reader.NET: “Samsung’s new, highly portable e-book reader, dubbed ‘Papyrus,’ will be available in Korea in June 2009 and in the UK and North America sometime later (likely within several months).” As the site notes, though, this lacks some features of the Kindle, the obvious choice for comparison in the American market.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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May 2 2009

Kindle users are old

Someone at Cne, came up with the clever idea of running a poll to learn the age of people who use Amazon’s miracle book reader, the Kindle. What surprised Cnet and what should surprise anyone who looks at the results is that 50% of the people who use Kindles are over 50 years old. About 27% were over 60.

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Apr 30 2009

Apple iPhone "Mediapad" Could Be a Kindle Killer

Is Apple’s rumored “mediapad” entertainment device a threat to Amazon’s Kindle e-book reader? I think it is, but the only people who may care are current Kindle owners, some of whom may end up wishing they had waited on their purchase.

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Apr 28 2009

Apple May Bring a Non-iPhone To Verizon Wireless

The Narrative Fallacy writes “According to BusinessWeek, Verizon Wireless is in talks with Apple to distribute two new iPhone-like devices that are not iPhones. (Apple has created prototypes.) AT&T’s contract with Apple, which has not been made public, is believed to cover all models of the iPhone, but only the iPhone. So if Apple builds something that isn’t an iPhone — and perhaps doesn’t even make cellular calls — they won’t be violating their exclusivity contract with AT&T, which runs through at least 2010. One device is a smaller, less expensive calling device described by a person who has seen it as an ‘iPhone lite.’ The other is a media pad, said to be smaller than a Kindle but with a bigger screen, that would let users listen to music, view photos, watch high-definition videos, and make calls over a Wi-Fi connection. (And read books?) Apple could use the prospect of an iPhone-esque device as leverage to prevent Verizon Wireless from introducing the Palm Pre, or at least to delay its introduction on Verizon’s network. ‘The media pad category might go to Verizon,’ said one person who has seen the device. ‘We are talking about a device where people will say, “Damn, why didn’t we do this?” Apple is probably going to define the damn category.'” Reader stevegee58 writes with word that Verizon may be playing both ends against the middle. Marketwatch reports that Microsoft and Verizon are in talks to develop a touch-screen mobile phone that would run on Windows Mobile.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Apr 22 2009

Kindle 2 Tear-Down Reveals Price of Components

adeelarshad82 writes “Amazon’s wildly popular Kindle 2 got a good old fashioned tear-down from the folks at market research firm iSuppli. According to the organization, the Kindle 2’s manufacturing cost is almost half as much as its retail price.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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