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Posts Tagged ‘Amazon.com’

Amazon.com Prepping Kindle Response to Google eBooks: Report

Amazon.com is reportedly preparing a Kindle-centric response to Googles new eBooks platform. – Amazon.com is planning a Kindle for Web app,
which would allow users to purchase e-books via a Website and then read those
titles in their browser.
A Dec. 7 release on Amazon’s corporate Website described Kindle for the Web as enabling anyone with access to a Web browser quot;to buy and read ful…


Amazon.com Leads Pack of New Android App Stores

Google’s Android operating system is so open source, so companies such as Amazon.com, Verizon and Sprint are taking advantage of the platform to offer mobile applications. – Want to set up shop and sell mobile applications? There’s
a platform for that: Android, operating system Google unleashed to the open source
community. And companies taking advantage of the search engine’s largesse.
The Wall Street Journal advanced the story TechCrunch started last month that Ama…


Amazon.com Launching Android App Store, Tablet: Report

Amazon.com is launching a tablet computer based on Google’s Android platform and an application store to accompany it. – Amazon.com is launching a tablet computer based on Google’s
Android operating system along with an application store to run software
programs on it.
TechCrunch said Sept. 27 the application store, a rival to Google’s Android Market, costs
$99 for developers to join.
Amazon will pay developers…


Amazon.com Will Challenge Google: 10 Possible Ways

Amazon.com is getting ready to offer a video streaming service and when it does a major market battle may develop between it and Google. – Amazon.com is making plans to add a subscription-based video
streaming service to its list of offerings and is trying to drum up
support for it among media companies, the Wall Street Journal is
reporting. The publication said that the service would compete quite
well with Netflixs Instant Stream…


Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble Heat E-Reader Wars

Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble engaged in a rapid-fire price war June 21, with both companies announcing substantial reductions for their original e-readers. In addition, Barnes & Noble also announced a WiFi-only version of its Nook for $149. The price cuts suggest that the competition in the e-reader space, already heated thanks to the increasing popularity of the devices and the introduction of the Apple iPad, may be heating up even further. As Amazon and Barnes & Noble cut prices and improve their devices’ features in order to gain more users, smaller e-reader competitors could find themselves squeezed out of the market. – The e-reader wars are heating up.
On June 21, Barnes amp; Noble announced a price reduction
for its Nook e-reader from $259 to $199, along with a WiFi-only version of the
device for $149. While owners of either device can receive a free connection at
all AT amp;T hot spots, those with the origi…


Barnes and Noble, Amazon.com Slash E-Reader Prices

Barnes & Noble cut the price of its original Nook e-reader and announced a new WiFi-only version, as it seeks to compete in an increasingly crowded space against not only Amazon.com’s Kindle but also the Apple iPad. This newest announcement follows April’s Nook software update, which included a Web browser and Android-based games. Not to be outdone, Amazon slashed its Kindle price to below the original Nook’s. Both the Nook and Kindle proved bestsellers during the 2009 holiday shopping season, according to their respective manufacturers, but the iPad’s selling of 2 million units since its April debut suggests that the e-reader space will only get more competitive. – Barnes amp; Nobles Nook e-reader is now available in two versions, with
the bookseller issuing a cheaper WiFi-only device to complement its original
3G-equipped one. The rollout comes as Barnes amp; Noble finds itself competing
not only with Amazon.coms popular Kindle e-reader, but also the App…


Amazon.com’s Kindle In All Target Stores June 6

Amazon.com plans to release its Kindle e-reader in all Target stores starting June 6, creating a bricks-and-mortar sales channel to complement its online device sales. The Kindle competes against Barnes & Nobles Nook and the Apple iPad. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos recently suggested that his company’s strategy to combat the iPad would be to focus on the Kindle’s e-reader capabilities and its proficiency as a dedicated device. According to an online report, the Kindle will retail at Target for $259. – Amazon.coms Kindle e-reader will debut in all Target stores
June 6, creating a new bricks-and-mortar sales channel for the device.
According to a June 2 Reuters report, the Kindle will retail for $259.
The broader rollout implies that Targets more limited
Kindle offering, which started in late A…


Amazon.com announces Kindle for Mac

Amazon.com has revealed “Kindle for Mac” application which enables readers over the world to enjoy reading Kindle books for free of cost at their Mac computers.
The Kindle Store in US presently provides around 450,000 books that include New Releases and 102 of 111 New York Times Bestsellers. Thus it becomes the unique place [...]

Amazon.com Advocates Crowdsourcing, Mechanical Turk in NYC

Amazon.com executive Sharon Chiarella used a presentation at the Global Sourcing Forum and Expo in New York City to extol the benefits of crowdsourcing for organizations, citing the companies using Amazon.coms Mechanical Turk platform. Mechanical Turk enlists massive online crowds to help companies complete tasks.
– NEW YORK – A million strangers could benefit
a company more than a handful of highly trained employees, at least if you
subscribe to the concept of crowdsourcing. In the case of Amazon.com and its
Mechanical Turk, the online retailers vice president Sharon Chiarella told the
audience at the Glob…


Amazon.com Selling TwitterPeek Mobile Twitter Device for $99

Peek Nov. 3 launched TwitterPeek, a mobile device designed to let users send tweets and direct messages from the leading microblog service without incurring the data costs associated with texting on smartphones. TwitterPeek is available exclusively from Amazon.com for $99.95. The price includes 6 months of unlimited Twitter service. However, Twitterpeek lacks telephony services; smartphones such as the Apple iPhone, RIM Blackberry Bold, and devices based on Google’s Android mobile operating system let users not only speak to one another, but access Web services such as Twitter.

Handheld device maker Peek Nov. 3 launched TwitterPeek,
a mobile device designed to let users send tweets and direct messages
from the leading microblog service without incurring the data costs
associated with texting on smartphones.
TwitterPeek is available exclusively from Amazon…


5 Ways Barnes and Noble’s Nook Could Overcome Amazon.com’s Kindle

Barnes Noble’s Nook e-reader faces substantial competition as it attempts to take market share away from Amazon.coms popular Kindle line, but it could conceivably triumph thanks to a combination of new technology, Google Android, brick-and-mortar stores, and other e-readers such as Plastic Logic’s QUE. The introduction of the long-rumored Apple tablet PC could also have a seismic effect on the e-reader market, as well as Amazon.coms and Barnes Noble’s ability to compete in the space.
– Barnes amp; Noble’s Nook
e-reader will go head-to-head with Amazon.coms Kindle this holiday season.
While the Kindle cornered much of the publics attention throughout 2009, thanks
in part to extraordinarily high-profile launches of its latest models, it now
faces substantial competition from co…


Barnes and Noble Selling Plastic Logic E-Reader, Battles Amazon.com

Barnes Noble will sell Plastic Logic’s QUE, an e-reader targeted at business users, in its bookstores and through its online storefront. The announcement shows that Barnes Noble considers the QUE a non-competitor against its own Nook e-reader, which was rolled out in a high-profile event on Oct. 20 in New York City. The Nook will compete heartily against Amazon.com’s Kindle e-reader this holiday season.
– Barnes amp; Noble announced an agreement to sell Plastic
Logics QUE e-reader through both its brick-and-mortar stores and online
retailer, despite the bookseller rolling out its own Nook e-reader last week.
Barnes amp; Nobles in-store placement of the QUE will be near displays for the
Nook.


Amazon.com CEO apologizes for Orwell incident

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Amazon.com Inc. CEO Jeffrey P. Bezos has apologized to Kindle customers for deleting pirated copies of George Orwell novels “1984″ and “Animal Farm” from their e-reader devices.
Kindle users were surprised last week to find that Orwell works they had purchased were removed from their readers and their money refunded.
Amazon said last [...]

The library that never closes

The Open Library hopes to unite the net and the printed word by creating a web page for every book. Bobbie Johnson talks to the audacious project’s leader

The internet’s relationship with books, it is fair to say, has been a tumultuous one. Ever since the digital revolution started changing our relationship with information, the printed word – one of the most successful technologies in history – has been on the back foot.

Amazon has altered the face of the industry twice – first in the 1990s by changing the way books are sold and then, more recently, the way they are consumed, with its Kindle electronic book reader. Google has caused its own earthquake in the print world with its Book Search scheme – a plan to suck the text of millions of books into its search engine that has raised the hackles of publishers and authors alike.

Talk to workers at either of these technology companies and there is a feeling of technological inevitability: that the printed book is a stepping stone in the evolution of information, and now lies ready to be devoured by its hi-tech successors.

Not everybody thinks that way, however, including the Open Library – a project with an audacious goal that it hopes can bring the web and books closer together.

The scheme is to create a single page on the web for every book that has ever been published; an enormous, searchable catalogue of information about millions of books. It is still in beta, but already more than 23m books are in its system, drawing information from 19 major libraries and linking to the text of more than 1m out-of-copyright titles.

That is admirable work for just a handful of staff at the library, an arm of the non-profit Internet Archive (which itself has the vast objective of trying to keep a historical record of the web for future generations). But with information about books already being processed by hugely popular websites such as Google and Amazon, the question remains – why bother?

George Oates, the newly installed project leader, says it’s a way to preserve book records for history and, crucially, make the information usable by anybody.

“It’s remarkably difficult to unify this information,” she says, when we meet at the Internet Archive building in San Francisco’s leafy Presidio park, a former military outpost that is, rather aptly, historically preserved. “As much as the libraries attempt to have similar standards and orders, there are always gotchas and nooks and crannies that have to be worked out.”

The locus position

More than simply bringing together cold lists of books from isolated libraries, however, she also believes OL can breathe life into books by grabbing information from around the internet.

“Imagine books more as a networked object, rather than a single entity,” she suggests. “We start with this kernel and then we see what we can pile onto it … it’s a locus for all the information about a book that’s on the wider web.”

In a way, it’s like a Wikipedia for printed material (indeed, it runs on wiki software, allowing anyone to add their own notes on different books or editions). And Oates, who took over the project this year, is hoping to turn it from a skilful attempt to ingest vast amounts of data into something that is useful to ordinary people.

The site can potentially pull information from all over the web – retailers, reviews, book clubs, forums and enthusiast sites – as well as from social networks that already exist for bibliophiles, such as LibraryThing or GoodReads.

“It is about sharing as openly as possible – and that’s really liberating … we’re almost a non-threat to the rest of the web, because we’re not keeping the property.”

Oates knows a thing or two about sharing objects online. For the past few years, the Australian was one of the leading lights at the popular photo website Flickr – spending four years as lead designer, before moving to a role that included projects such as the Commons: a scheme to use Flickr as a window on publicly held photography collections.

Journey of discovery

The lessons from her previous work are carrying through to the project in obvious ways – a redesign is being mooted to make more palatable to those who don’t have a degree in library science. But she is also hoping to introduce some of sense of serendipity or exploration to the records.

“Right now it’s about search and retrieve, and there’s no sense of browsing or skipping around,” she says. “In the future we can start to do queries like ‘show me all the popular subjects that were written about in 1934′. You can start to trend that over time, look at peaks and troughs in areas of interest. The data’s all there, but it’s about making connections that are inferred by the data itself – I’m really excited by that.”

Propagating that idea could be made more difficult by Google, which last week revamped its book search to make it a more sleek and social experience. Oates says she doesn’t see that in adversarial terms, however.

“The book search on Google is awesome – they’ve thrown a shitload of computing power at it, and you can see books that mention things, websites that mention those books and books on a map. It’s useful, but it’s really clinical.” Oates won’t say any more about Google, but her colleagues are less reticent. Peter Brantley, the archive’s director of access, has been a vocal critic of the company’s plans – even going as far as calling Google’s attempt to gain exemption against future copyright claims as ­”disgusting”.

There is certainly a tension between the two schemes, partially because their intentions are so similar while their approaches are so different. But, while Google has the backing of many publishers, who see the chance to make some extra cash in the deal, one crucial ally for Open Library may be the academic world.

If the scheme gives researchers and students the chance to use Open Library in their work – referring to an OL page as a citation source, or building a bibliography using its tools – they could get a core audience that spreads the concept. Plus, of course, the idea is that Open Library will remain just that – open – for ever. “The longevity of the work that we’re doing is a bit of a culture shock, and a really curious solution to provide,” she says. “How do we write stuff to disk that’s going to be retrievable in 1,000 years? This is a very new problem for my brain – not that the systems I’ve worked on before would go up in smoke, but this is designed explicitly not to.”

Neutral success?

Still, regardless of long-term vision, the scheme’s success is not clear cut. Despite its meek appearance, the library world is big business – and it is not clear that big libraries are particularly keen on giving away the keys to anyone just yet. Organisations such as the British Library have their own projects to archive their vast collections for the web.

Still, Open Library is hoping that it can succeed by being a neutral space, without agendas or commercial imperatives.

“I want it to be a place where people can love books and contribute information about books,” Oates says. Perhaps, in the face of the onslaught of digital ­information, the printed word has found a new way to evolve.

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