Posts Tagged ‘Amazon.com’

My Final Decision (for now)

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

After reading all the reviews and tinkering with both of the major e-readers on the market, I have come to a decision in my e-reader purchase.  At the end of this post, I’ll reveal the choice I’ve made but I shall continue to share ideas, thoughts, and news about e-readers.  The New York Times and Wall Street Journal have summed up the long and short of this debate for me:

New York Times E-reader Report by David Pogue

Wall Street Journal E-reader Report by Walter Mossberg

Excerpt form Mossberg WSJ-

Amazon’s Kindle has been the king of the nascent, much-hyped, category of wireless e-readers since it came out in 2007. Now, numerous companies are determined to challenge the Kindle with dedicated, mass-market gadgets for reading digital books and periodicals. The latest, and potentially most important, of these is a contender called the Nook, produced by the giant bookstore chain Barnes & Noble Inc., which started shipping it this week.
The two devices look very similar, but have key differences in capabilities, user interface and polish. Overall, after testing the Nook for about a week, I don’t think it’s as good as the Kindle, at least not yet. At launch, the Nook has the feel of a product with great potential that was rushed to market before it was fully ready.

WSJ Personal Technology Columnist Walt Mossberg gives a hands-on review of the new Barnes & Noble Nook e-reader. He says the Nook, a direct competitor to Amazon’s Kindle, comes up short.

Like the latest standard-size Kindle, which came out earlier this year, the Nook is a roughly 8-inch by 5-inch, ivory-colored plastic tablet that costs $259 and connects wirelessly to an online store. The two devices have essentially identical reading screens, 6 inches when measured diagonally, that allow for only monochrome text and gray-scale graphics, not color. Both come with two gigabytes of internal memory, enough to hold about 1,500 digital books.
Nook’s most obvious difference from Kindle is that it also boasts a second, smaller color screen beneath the main reading screen. This touch screen is used for navigating and for typing via an on-screen keyboard when performing searches or adding notes to books. Also, when the touch screen is dark, it can be swiped to turn pages instead of using the physical page-turning buttons at the sides of the main screen.
The competing Kindle (formerly called the Kindle 2, but now back to just Kindle) uses a joystick, Menu and Home buttons, and pop-up menus on the main screen for navigating. It has a physical keyboard below the screen for typing and can turn pages only using physical buttons.
Also, unlike the Kindle, the Nook lets you lend certain digital books to others for a limited period, an innovation that removes one of the most common complaints about buying books electronically instead of on paper.

My conclusion is this-

Jeff Bezos can relax.  Nook is no competition.  Definitely not yet, at least.  I spent an hour with the Nook and my local Barnes & Noble manager who had just as much trouble as I did, with his new demonstration Nook for customers to look at.

I hereby reverse my previous statement that the Nook pros outweigh the cons with these:

1.
it’s slow.  Much slower than the Kindle. So slow that you don’t know if it is working after you hit a command button, so you keep doing it and this messes it up.

2.
it’s cumbersome.  Very difficult to figure how to do common things like – find the list of newspapers to download.

3.
it’s a little deceptive in that the color touch screen is not really that, so you cannot navigate like you can on an IPhone.

4.
It does not feel as “nice” as a Kindle.  It seems more “clunky” (though nothing like as clunky as Sony’s EReader).

kindle-in-hand
Bottom line – as they have identical prices, get a Kindle.  Nook is not ready for market yet.

I’ll be back soon with an update on my purchase soon,

Geoff Hasler

Kindle winning battle (for now), but Adobe is poised to win e-book war

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

I came across this post yesterday on www.ComputerWorld.com and almost forgot to blog about it-

Amazon’s Kindle winning the battle, but Adobe is poised to win the war. by Eric Lai

Adobe announced that more than 100 publishers, book retailers and libraries are using Adobe’s Content Server 4 software to deliver encryptable e-books via the two formats favored by Adobe: PDF and ePub.

STOP THE PRESSES!!!! Adobe???  What’s next, a Google e-reader (don’t get any ideas G-men)?

Adobe may balk at the comparison, but its role in the e-book market is similar to the one Microsoft Corp. plays in the PC market: It’s a builder of a semi-open ecosystem of partners to whom it sells publishing tools.

In this analogy, Amazon.com is like Apple: successful, but secretive, with a reliance on proprietary formats like the Kindle’s native AZW that creates customer hassle and lock-in.

Adobe_Flash_cs3

I really like the idea of being an ‘open-source’ of sorts in that they’ll give the software away to users, and hopefully Google will stick to search engines and not get involved in the e-reader race.  I cannot fathom the thought of a cross-platform/device e-reader, but I certainly welcome a better product than the hardware chioces we have at this point.  To recap earlier posts, the nook is much better designed, but the Kindle has an international version.  Now Software giant Adobe is in the mix, and while they may not release until sometime next year, the hunt for top spot in e-readers is afoot.

Until we read again,

Geoff Hasler

Black Friday e-reader deals

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

The Kindle and the Nook are sold exclusively through their respective companies, so the only possibility of a  Black Friday Deal (slim to none) is a coupon or deal  from Amazon or Barnes & Noble-

A similar post with other information can be found here:

Black Friday E-reader Deals

black friday

Hopefully this helps us save a bit of grief when braving the crowds-

I’ll try to come up with a post for Cyber Monday Deals if Amazon and Barnes & Noble even play ball.

Thanks for reading,

- Geoff Hasler

Kindle Gets Rejected by Universities

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Both University of Wisconsin-Madison and Syracuse University rejected Amazon’s Kindle to replace textbooks, apparently due to the lack of accessibility to blind students.

It seems there was text-to-speech software plans that got nixed by the Authors Guild.  Silly when you think about it, because there are audio books anyhow.  Let’s keep an eye on this development.

http://www.bit-tech.net/news/bits/2009/11/12/kindle-dx-rejected-by-universities/1

Kindle Free List

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Amazon offers many titles free to download if you own a Kindle.

Score one for Amazon