Sony’s Going to Announce Something…

Are they just catching up to the leak with an official release of PRS-300 and PRS-600 or is Sony going to announce a rumored third wireless eBook Reader?

It’s all going to happen on August 25th, so stay tuned. More on the story here at Slashgear.

Is Amazon painting itself into a corner?

MarketWatch has an excellent article that highlights the dangerous game that Amazon’s playing. While the rest of the eBook world moves toward some kind of universality with the EPUB format, Amazon’s sticking to its guns and selling a version of its Mobipocket format for KINDLE’s only. (Or the Kindle Reader for iPod.)

That presents a bit of a gamble to Kindle adopters as the rest of the eBook Market seems poised to put the emphasis on selling untethered eBook Readers capable of reading eBooks from anywhere. Why hook yourself to a piece of technology that lacks adaptability (the Amazon-only-Kindle) and carries a sometimes uncomfortable relationship with its maker?

If Amazon is smart they’ll cut the umbilical, dump the proprietary format, bring the price of Kindle down and open it up for the user to control. Then start selling eBooks, yah?

Astak Pro Releases $199 eBook Reader

Another new, more affordable kid on the block, the Astak  EZ Reader 5 is available for pre-order here.

Coming in six colors and compact with a 5-inch ePaper 600×800, 8-level display, the EZ Reader Pocket Pro priced at $199 is an obvious challenger to Sony’s new PRS-300. Get a full list of specifications and ordering information on the Pocket Pro here.

EZ Reader Pocket Pro has a slightly larger companion, the 6″ EZ Reader that comes with similar abilities but with a 6-inch screen. It’s also showing signs of a reality check on eBook Reader pricing, coming in at $259. Still more than the average household is going to adopt in large quantities, but it’s proof that competition is starting to open up the marketplace to more than first adopters.

Free is Good but it’s not original…

Sorry folks. Here’s yesterday’s news that failed to post for some reason…

Here’s an Associated Press story about established authors doing what independents have been doing for years. Believe me, James Patterson’s not taking the same risk. I’m glad he’s taking the risk and adding his heft to the eBook Revolution, but his motivation is different from a new novelist on the road up.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not complaining and there are some risks involved for Patterson. But free offerings from his backlist can be used in this way to promote his new material.

It’s an entirely different concept for the independent novelist who has yet to build a readership and gives away his or her work.

And the idea that Amazon is supporting the ‘free’ market and low pricing is laughable. Amazon is being forced to comply by the demands of that market. They started off with, and still maintain, high prices for content and their machine (the Kindle) that reads them. They’re doing what they have to do to survive.

Make no mistake. The established publishing world is complying and adapting to an eBook market and business model that was established on the backs of independent authors who have been giving their work away for years.

Plastic Logic and a Nameless Rollable eNewspaper

Ok, it doesn’t have a name yet, nothing cool like Papyrus or Kindle or what have you, but this week Plastic Logic unveiled a lightweight E-Ink newspaper reader roughly 8.5″x11″ that updates wirelessly.

Its touch-screen interactivity allows users to make notations and offers video, if you can imagine. Read the full story about it here.

It will be manufactured in Germany and Plastic Logic plans to have it available for sale early next year. The device has a large storage capacity,  is made of flexible plastic (.25 inches thick) and boasts an environmentally friendlier profile than eBook Reading contemporaries.

I’m sure I read about something like this in a science fiction novel, yah?

Rupert can’t be serious…

Granted publishing billionaire Rupert Murdoch is a smart cookie, but we’ve been wondering if perhaps he’s finally hit the wall with the digital age. First he boasted getting onboard by designing his own handheld reading device, and then he more recently about-faced and was going to dump his ‘eReader’ in favor of providing content to existing eReaders. (He owns a lot of newspapers.)

Well this article at BBC has Rupert declaring that his News Corp is now going to start charging for content on his many online news resources. (Old story, painful lesson to come.) This after losing $3.4 billion in the first half of this year.  He needs new revenue streams and is going to make the mistake of driving people away to free news providers by charging for what he used to give away. Since the Internet will not be shaped to suit anyone’s will, (especially outmoded business models) we are looking toward his next $3 billion in losses.

I’ve got one thing to say: “What are you going to do when that doesn’t work?”

There is a way to charge for content, many specialty news addresses, like specialty television channels have done it, because there is a special audience. You just can’t charge for anything pulled from a wire service. Adapt or Die. The Internet favors the small and flexible, so News Corp’s losses are just evidence of those processes at work, yah?

An Apology from Amazon…

We talked about Amazon’s dictatorial ways a few days ago. Read it here. Well, they finally received enough complaints for entering the Private Property of Kindle owners–their Kindle eBook Collections–and deleting copies of George Orwell’s 1984 and Animal Farm without warning or explanation.  So they’re apologizing. They later claimed the evil deed was due to a mix up with the party doing the sales. The point is, Amazon showed an inexcusable lack of respect for their customers’ privacy.

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos apologized for the action.
——–
“This is an apology for the way we previously handled illegally sold copies of 1984 and other novels on Kindle. Our “solution” to the problem was stupid, thoughtless, and painfully out of line with our principles. It is wholly self-inflicted, and we deserve the criticism we’ve received. We will use the scar tissue from this painful mistake to help make better decisions going forward, ones that match our mission.

With deep apology to our customers,

Jeff Bezos
Founder & CEO
Amazon.com
——–
OUCH! He used the ‘s’ word! Well, they deserve it. There’s more and commentary here at CNN.

Suddenly slow news day…

To give you an idea how slow, I’m posting a link to an article at InfoWorld.com that talks about ePub eBook format being the new PDF. Read it here. It’s not the sexiest story in the world, but it speaks to the next major step in the eBook Revolution: the adoption of a universal eBook file format. The creation/adoption of a format that will read on any of the growing collection of eBook reading devices will pave the way for eBook ubiquity. It’s an excellent article though, that talks optimistically about the future of the revolution.

Imagine the amount of duplication that’s going on at major publishers as they configure their eBook titles for the numerous available formats.

FULL Sony Reader PRS-300 and PRS-650 Specifications Released

We mentioned the ‘leaked’ specifics a couple days ago. Now  Sonyinsider.com has the full specifications for Sony’s new eBook Readers including price. Check it out here.

At $199, the PRS-300 sets the stage for some real savings  as the other eBook reader designers are forced to respond to that price. Even with the slightly smaller screen and profile, the PRS-300 promises the older PRS-700’s functions and more, all squeezed into a compact new body.

The PRS-600 at $299 offers a size and look similar to its ancestors including a 6-inch E Ink screen. With its ability to allow page-turning with the swipe of a finger, the PRS-600 will clearly capture the imagination of eBook fans.

It won’t be long before these prices start to drop even more, yah?

It ain’t easy being a dictator…

Amazon is being sued for remotely deleting copies of George Orwell’s 1984 from Kindles. It later explained the action was taken because the copy in question was provided by a third party that did not have the right to sell it. Read the full story at Reuters. It seems that in one of the cases it deleted a student’s ‘copious’ notes with the eBook.

This will be an interesting case to follow because it really deals with the question of ownership. The offended Kindle-user bought the eBook for .99 in good faith with a reasonable expectation that he would have access to the information. He was never given a reason for the deletion or provided a replacement. The question is, does Amazon have the right to delete or effectively ‘destroy’ someone’s property? If I committed such an act it would be called theft or vandalism.

If Amazon doesn’t have the right to act on property it sells, then one could argue that Amazon does not have the right to dictate what an individual does with his/her property after the sale.

So one has to wonder if digitally locking and restricting access to  digital property is legal.