Kindle Fire
Amazon’s Kindle Fire might finally change the whole publishing industry – irrevocable; http://eicker.at/KindleFire
Borthwick on net neutrality, FCC: Access to broadband [is] the single most important driver of innovation; http://eicker.at/NN
Rayport: Mobilfunk und mobiles Internet verändern das menschliche Leben in epochaler Weise; http://eicker.at/MobilesInternet
Long Term Evolution (LTE) gains traction around the world: mobile carriers are switching on 4G globally; http://eicker.at/LTE
Apple FaceTime did not launch as a killer app, but it may end up as one, providing a halo effect; http://eicker.at/FaceTime
4G, 3.9G (LTE) to be serious, will give the Internet a boost like landline broadband did before; http://j.mp/9f0PEY
Rosenbaum: Content is king, no longer. The world has changed: curation is king; http://j.mp/a847sA (via @pfandtasse)
Amazon starts offering its larger Kindle DX eReader internationally on January 19th; http://j.mp/8E1ISi
Amazon starts offering its Kindle eReader internationally: 3G coverage in over 100 countries; http://j.mp/4fJADL
NYT: “Amazon’s Kindle electronic reading device is going global. – The company announced on Tuesday evening that it would soon begin selling a new version of the Kindle that can wirelessly download books both in the United States as well as in more than 100 other countries. … International users of the new Kindle will have a slightly smaller collection of around 200,000 English-language books to choose from, and their catalogs will be tailored to the country they purchased the device in. Amazon said it would sell books from a range of publishers including Bloomsbury, Hachette, HarperCollins, Lonely Planet and Simon & Schuster. – Among the apparent holdouts: Random House, which is owned by Bertelsmann, the German media conglomerate. Stuart Applebaum, a Random House spokesman, said the company’s ‘discussions with Amazon about this opportunity are ongoing, productive and private.'”
Amazon.de: “In den vergangenen Jahren haben wir Millionen englischsprachiger Bücher an unsere Kunden in Deutschland verschickt. Und wenn auch Sie einer der vielen Amazon.de-Kunden sind, die gerne englischsprachige Bücher lesen, haben wir jetzt gute Nachrichten für Sie: Wir können unseren drahtlosen E-Book-Reader Kindle nun auch Kunden außerhalb der USA anbieten.”
SO: “Der Kindle kann ab sofort online für 279 Dollar im US-Portal von Amazon.com vorbestellt werden. Das Gerät soll dann direkt nach der Frankfurter Buchmesse am 19. Oktober ausgeliefert werden. – Der einzige deutschsprachige Inhalt, den man derzeit bei Amazon für den Kindle kaufen kann, ist die elektronische Ausgabe der ‘Frankfurter Allgemeinen Zeitung’. Die digitale ‘FAZ’ wird wie 45 andere Zeitungen aus den USA, Großbritannien und anderen Ländern über Amazon.com vertrieben.”
heise: “Auf der Buchmesse in Frankfurt dürften der Einstieg von Amazon in den internationalen E-Book-Markt und die Lizenzierung von Titeln in deutscher Sprache ein wichtiges Thema werden. Zwar spielen E-Books selbst in den USA beim Buchabsatz noch eine untergeordnete Rolle. Allerdings verkaufte sich jüngst der Bestseller ‘The Lost Symbol’ von Dan Brown bei Amazon als E-Book besser als die fast doppelt so teure Hardcover-Version. ‘Für Bücher, die wir auf Papier und digital vertreiben, kommt durchschnittlich auf zwei gedruckte Bücher ein E-Book’, sagte Bezos.”
Bitkom: Zum Jahreswechsel gab es knapp 16 Millionen UMTS-Anschlüsse in Deutschland; http://tr.im/gbts
Gerrit Eicker 08:19 on 28. September 2011 Permalink |
TC: “On Wednesday morning in New York City, Amazon will unveil the Kindle Fire. Yes, this is the name Amazon has settled on, to help differentiate the product from the e-ink Kindles… It will be a 7-inch backlit display tablet that looks similar to the BlackBerry PlayBook. … [H]aving played with a DVT model myself, I can assure you that it’s better than the PlayBook because the software is better and, more importantly, the content available is much better. … We also originally heard that Amazon Prime would be included, as a big enticement for would-be buyers. That may be off the table for now as well – but it’s not yet clear. It’s possible Amazon will release one version with Prime included for $300 and a version without it for $250. Getting Amazon Prime for $50 would still be a deal, since it’s normally $79 for the year.”
pC: “The success of the Kindle shows Amazon is prepared to think differently from others and to disrupt its own products – in the Kindle’s case to disrupt the cash cow of print book sales – in order to be innovative and seize early advantage in digital markets. If Amazon’s hardware is undifferentiated and virtually the same as RIM’s PlayBook then Amazon has to differentiate elsewhere with content, experience and business models. Otherwise it will suffer the same fate as RIM’s PlayBook. … Amazon will build a true media tablet. The first true media tablet. The Kindle tablet will focus on the future of all media – TV, movies, music, books, magazines – to enable Amazon to become the dominant digital media retailer. That is Amazon’s ambition.”
Guardian: “Amazon hopes its brand recognition and loyal book-buying customer base will enable it to do battle with Apple, which produced 75% of the tablets sold this year. – Research firm Forrester reckons the Kindle tablet could sell between 3m and 5m units in its first year.”
VB: “The timing of Amazon’s announcement might have something to do with competition from Barnes and Nobel, which is also allegedly scheduled to announce a new Nook Color tablet that will also retail for $250.”
ATD: “In 2010, magazine publishers got giddy about the prospects of selling their stuff on the iPad. This year’s version of the story: Lots of enthusiasm, tempered with a little bit of skepticism, over Amazon’s new tablet. … Publishers will keep around 70 percent of all Amazon sales, and the retailer will share some customer data with the publishers. … The publishers who are on board with Amazon view their decision to link up as a no-brainer: They want more distribution channels for their stuff, not fewer. And they’ve been begging, unsuccessfully, for a credible competitor to the iPad since April 2010.”
TC: “With the launch of the Kindle Fire tomorrow, I thought it would be fun to write a little bit sci-fi and imagine what the publishing market will look like in the next ten or so years. I’m a strong proponent of the ebook and, as I’ve said again and again, I love books but they’re not going to make it past this decade, at least in most of the developed world. … 2025 – The transition is complete even in most of the developing world. The book is, at best, an artifact and at worst a nuisance. Book collections won’t disappear – hold-outs will exist and a subset of readers will still print books – but generally all publishing will exist digitally.”
Gerrit Eicker 17:33 on 28. September 2011 Permalink |
TC: “Amazon Fires $199, 7-Inch Tablet At Apple – The Fire itself is rather characterless and dull. It looks a lot like the 7-inch BlackBerry PlayBook (probably for good reason) and features just enough tech to pass as acceptable. There’s a two-point multitouch screen (the iPad has a 10-point screen), and an unspecified CPU… The most notable change is obviously the multitouch 7-inch LCD rather than an e-ink display, but moreover, the Kindle Fire is a complete storefront for the retailer rather than just an ereader. The tablet features apps for Amazon’s Android Appstore, Kindle store, Amazon MP3, and Prime Instant Video. … Amazon is pricing this model aggressively. Bloomberg is reporting prior to Amazon’s official event that the Kindle Fire hits at just $199 and comes with 30-days of Amazon Prime.”
TC: “Amazon has revealed a new line of E-Ink Kindles that looks to bolster their ‘traditional’ eReader lineup. The three new models have taken the stage: the $79 Kindle, the $99 Kindle Touch, and the $149 Kindle Touch 3G. – The new super small, non-touch Kindle was announced to appeal to Amazon’s legion of eReading purists. It’s small enough to fit in a pack pocket, and will cost users a scant $79 – customers can order today, and Amazon says it will ship today too.”
Gerrit Eicker 11:57 on 29. September 2011 Permalink |
GigaOM: “They say Apple has met its first real tablet competitor. And no, it is not Samsung or Motorola. Instead it is from a company that started out selling books on the Internet: Amazon. And while there is some truth to that assertion, I wouldn’t put a lot of weight in the argument. … With the new Kindles, Amazon has been able to define the hybrid retail environment. … Given that we are increasingly shifting away from buying physical media and are instead opting for digital goods, Amazon is smart in its introducing the new Kindle tablet. … Amazon’s primary business is selling us things – lots of them – and getting them to us as cheaply as possible. And that includes physical and digital goods and services. That is its corporate DNA, and that DNA is going to influence all of its decisions – whether it is redesigning its website or defining new tablets. … The bottom line is that Amazon will be successful – at least more successful than Motorola or HTC – but it won’t come at the expense of Apple’s iPad or Samsung’s Android-based tablets.“