Automotive tires and eReaders…makes sense… Now give it a name!

This is an amazing piece of machinery from Bridgestone (the tire makers, yah…). Read about the 13-inch color e-paper display that handles pen input at Engadget.com here. There’s a quick YouTube video link that’s worth seeing where the guy writes right on the screen. Very cool.

Maybe it takes a tire company to come up with an innovative approach to the eBook Revolution. Up until now, color eReaders in development have looked like slightly modified versions of the regular black and white eReaders. This machine from Bridgestone knocks all those preconceptions aside, and frankly looks perfect for reading eBooks, and more importantly with its full color depth is ready to display the fine photography found in  eMags and large format publications.

Excellent! I wonder if they’re going to get into mousetrap design…

More Consumer Control from Amazon

Someone please tell me how the behavior of this ‘legitimate’ corporate entity is more benevolent, more creator and consumer sensitive than the torrent services offered at Pirate Bay?

Interesting story follows  exposing Amazon’s ulterior motives for Digital Rights Management and their Whispernet. I think we’ve all dated a control-freak like this.

The story follows an individual who was buying eBooks remotely from Amazon.com, and returning items he was unhappy with. Amazon thought his return-rate was too high so they suspended his Kindle account effectively wrecking half the $359 Amazon Kindle eBook Reader’s functionality.  Read the whole shocking story at Gizmodo here. I mean, the guy bought their machine…and then they put the boots to him, yah?

While reading this article repeat the words: Pirate Bay! Pirate Bay!

Little wonder file sharing is such a roaring success. Amazon’s as much as promoting it here.

Reid Minion Release for iPhone

Reid Minion 1.0, the iPhone application offering enhanced document and book reading for the iPhone and iPod is now available from Minion Software. prMac has the full story and specifications here. Reid Minion 1.0 includes a wide array of interesting adaptations including special font settings for speed readers and the visually impaired.

(Minion. I like the name, but it’s got a Clive Barker ring to it, yah?)

eBook 101 – For New Recruits

Okay, I don’t want those in the know to be offended, but there is a HUGE and CURIOUS group of people out there searching the Internet with a lot of questions. (The mainstream?) And they’re coming to eBook Rumors for answers. (The smart ones anyway…yah?)

It is still so very early in the technology. Word travels far and fast these days, but everyone is so busy it takes time to absorb the news. Those of us who have been in for a while rooting around for information might easily forget that the vast majority of web surfers are just starting to ask the question, “eBook, what’s an eBook?” And others still: “What in the hell would I do with one of those?”

The people at Pocket-lint.com have been kind enough to run over the basics here. For the early adopters, forgive the recap, for new members to the eBook Revolution, welcome.

Another Good Reason to Join the Revolution…

I really enjoyed this article at xkcd The blag of the webcomic. An intrepid eBook Reader and Kindle owner hangs a low-tech solution on a hi-tech revolution. You have to love the camera work. I hope it’s not too technical, yah!


Manybooks.net – Selection Grows – So Does the Readership!

Free eBooks!

Free eBooks!

Bought an eBook Reader and you want to start building your personal eLibrary right away? Take a look through Manybooks.net’s offering of 23,058 Free eBOOKS in multiple formats gathered from sources like Gutenberg, Indie and traditionally published authors.

Matthew McClintock creator of Manybooks.net has put together an interesting service for readers and writers that you’ve just got to see.

McClintock offers tools and conversion software downloads for readers and writers. You can download the eBooks in a format to suit your reading device, and conversion tools are available to writers for making their work available for digital consumption.

He also lists stats on the most popular eBook formats based on downloads. Click here to view.

I noticed that PDF is commanding top spot in format of choice. I wonder if that means people are reading them as PDF’s or whether they’re easier to convert to format of choice.

Fantastic site, yah!


Amazon owns Mobipocket.

Now keep that in mind as you read this story at The Daily News Online here. Amazon owns Mobipocket. In this story the tech writer fails to mention that Amazon owns Mobipocket, another huge online eBook sales company.

But the reporter asks whether Kindle Reader software for iPhone will be good for Amazon?

Missing from the article is the fact that Mobipocket delayed the release of the Mobipocket Reader for iPhone, just as its parent company Amazon delayed the release of the Kindle Reader for iPhone, in an attempt to manipulate the market and create an open field to deliver their Kindle 2.

That manipulation shut the millions of iPhone readers out of AMAZON and MOBIPOCKET because they could not open DRM-locked files with the APPS they had to develop on their own to turn their iPhones into eBook Readers. They couldn’t open and read the eBooks that AMAZON and MOBIPOCKET had for sale. One of those APPS mentioned in the article, the STANZA Reader is now a competitor in its own right, and is capable of opening practically all eBook formats and is available for Desktop too.

This economic and technical isolation encouraged iPhone eBook fans to look to other sources for reading material, some of which had to be cracked eBooks, unlocked, pirated, re-sold or borrowed out there on the web.

That in turn has begun the same sort of lock-picking and file-sharing that plagues the music and movie  industries.

So, to respond to that tech reporter’s suggestion that a Kindle Reader for iPhone could be good for Amazon, I will say, uh obviously, but it could have been much better for everyone if Amazon had not manipulated the marketplace and turned consumers into competitors. Yah?

Kindle 2 Rumor Coming True?

The idea was being bandied about over a month ago, but it looks like there’s truth to the rumor. Kindle 2 is being re-designed to have a bigger screen to handle newspapers more efficiently (and the capability to function outside the US, let’s hope…). Engadget.com reports it here.

Hard to believe a new one’s going to be available so quickly, with reports suggesting its release before the holiday buying season,  (makes more sense than the February launch of Kindle 2). It tells you how stiff the competition is, and how much Amazon wants to correct any of its initial blunders. I don’t think the planners there understood how quickly eBooks and eBook Readers would be adopted.

It’s clear that they underestimated their competition. Yah? Let’s hope they install a more competitive price too.


Happy Holidays

We’re pretty sure the eBook Battles will continue through the Easter weekend, but eBook Rumors wishes you a peaceful holiday just the same.

Got to take one day off, yah?

p.s. Oh what the hell: there’s a rumor at Slashgear that Foxconn (The ODM for Kindle 2) is charging into the eBook Revolution with an eBook reader of its own. Read about it here.

You gotta love Barnes and Noble

In the “It’s Never too Late to Copy Someone’s Success Department” Barnes and Noble is rumored to have its own eBook Reader in development. Read the whole story at Engadget here.

I guess they’ve got to do something to make up for the time they lost closing and dismantling their eBook Store. Read about that smooth move here. Up until late last year they had abandoned eBooks and now they’re in catch up mode. Read about their first smart move here. After purchasing Fictionwise to handle the sale of eBooks, they’re now making their own Kindle. We’ll see if they repeat Amazon’s mistakes as well, yah?