Kindle? or fizzle?
2007-11-20 09:53 pmIf you want everyone else's opinion, see the links after the cut. Here's mine: interesting play, but it's in the wrong game.
You see, Kindle is Amazon's attempt at an iPod for books. They're using what they hope is an elegant, convenient, and reasonably-priced piece of hardware (which I'd guess that they're selling at pretty close to cost when you factor in the pre-paid data plan) to sell digital copies of books (which are fairly expensive considering all the atoms they don't have to handle compared with their dead-tree counterparts).
Apple, on the other hand, is using convenient access to an extensive collection of audio tracks (which they sell at pretty close to cost) to sell a particularly elegant and convenient, but overpriced, piece of hardware. Apple isn't even in the hardware business, really: they understand that they're in the fashion business, and have made it really easy for other companies to sell accessories for iPods.
Hands up, who's going to build fashion accessories for the Kindle? Don't all speak at once... How many people are going to buy a Kindle for each of their kids? Is anybody going to let their kids loose on a piece of hardware that lets them buy books at $10/pop at the click of a button? That's what I thought.
The iPod succeeds, even in a market where there are plenty of far cheaper players, because its fashionable and because it's part of a large ecosystem of fashionable accessories. The iTunes lockin is negligible because hardly anyone bothers with it -- I seem to remember reading that the average iPod user downloads about three tracks from iTunes. The rest are all mp3's from ripped CDs.
There are cheaper alternatives to the Kindle, too: PDAs, smartphones, and of course paper books. You need a player of some sort to listen to a CD, and if you have a computer it's easy to rip any CD in your collection and put it on your iPod. You don't need a reader to read a book, and you can't put it on your Kindle!
See the difference?
Eventually, electronic readers are going to largely supplant paper; in order for that to happen they need to be cheap, and they need to be able to read books originally printed on paper. The first will happen pretty quickly: five or ten years. The second will require a display the size of a full page, and the ability of people to freely pass actual scanned page images from all those legacy books that were published before the age of computerized typesetting. That is going to require a massive shift in the copyright laws, and Amazon isn't going to help with that, any more than the RIAA is, and for the same reason: they need to protect their failing business model.
Meanwhile, if you're going to spend $400 on something that read electronic books, buy something that can also browse the web for free, display PDFs, and play videos. A low-end laptop, a PDA phone, a media-player, or an internet tablet. All but the laptop will also be small enough to fit in your pocket.
I ordered my XO a week ago, thanks.
Just to have everything all in one place, here are some links to what I've been reading in the last couple of days:
Amazon Kindle eBook Review (Verdict: Confusing, Expensive...but
Promising) and
15 Things I Just Learned About the Amazon Kindle in BoingBoing
Kindling Openness and Impact on O'Reilly
Amazon
Kindle vs. Sony Reader and
What You
Missed: Kindle Coverage in Wired
Amazon's $399 folly book reader in El Reg
Amazon Kindle Hands-On and Questions Answered (Gallery),
Amazon Kindle Delivers Free EV-DO 'Whispernet' Service, and
Comparing Amazon Kindle to E-Book Readers of Yesterday and Tomorrow in
Gizmodo.
Many details about the Kindle in Engadget
Kindle's
Overpriced Content in Techdirt
Amazon pushes Kindle book reader, but will anyone buy it? in BetaNews
Amazon Kindle: Kool or Krap? at Infoworld.
A couple of LJ posts with good discussions:
Tech Drool in
catsittingstill and
Has Amazon
finally got the printed-book killer? in
thatcrazycajun
...and a couple of alternatives:
The Nokia 810,
the XO, and
the Asus Eee; the latter from this post by
marypcb.
no subject
Date: 2007-11-21 08:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-22 01:27 am (UTC)I agree about eBooks being the "cheap edition".
no subject
Date: 2007-11-22 03:01 am (UTC)I've got two ways to read PDFs on the TX. I can use Documents to Go (which has a nasty habit of moving paragraphs, but it IS possible), or run them through Mobipocket and read them as .prcs. The latter comes out like hard copy run through a good, but not perfect, OCR scan, but since it gets converted into HTML in the middle of the process, if I want to KEEP the thing I can get into the guts of it and edit. Less software dependant, too.
no subject
Date: 2007-11-22 03:53 am (UTC)Imperfect conversion for PDF is usually the right thing: PDF's are tied to one paper size, and they're useless on the screen.
Kindle book pricing, etc.
Date: 2007-11-29 04:58 pm (UTC)For example, there are over 7k books originally from Project Gutenberg (via mobipocket's free ebooks section) selling for 99 cents. These (like all other 'Kindle editions') have been wrapped in DRM to lock them to a single device. Grr.
You can see some more details in the comments on this boing-boing post (toward the bottom):
http://www.boingboing.net/2007/11/20/amazon-kindle-the-we.html
Re: Kindle book pricing, etc.
Date: 2007-11-30 03:35 am (UTC)Re: Kindle book pricing, etc.
Date: 2007-12-01 08:27 pm (UTC)BTW, the free .prc versions originating from the PG texts are still available sans-DRM from the mobipocket site, and can be downloaded from there directly to the Kindle via the built-in web browser, which makes the DRM-encrusted versions available for sale rather pointless and annoying. You can similarly directly download the original .txt files from Project Gutenberg.
Other DRM-free ebooks in the mobipocket format are available for download from various places on the net, like http://manybooks.net/, And the Kindle can download from them as well.
If you want to do your own conversions to .mobi or .prc, the only way I've found to do this is using the free-as-in-beer utilities from mobipocket, which are windows-only. Apparently they can also be run under Wine, but I don't really consider that a good enough solution.
If there was any free-as-in-speech solution for producing a Kindle-supported ebook format (either by opening the mobipocket utilities or by adding support for another Free format), then the device would be attractive to me (especially if the price came down some), as I could ignore the Kindle store and it's stupid DRM entirely. Accordingly, I'm keeping an eye out for any developments along those lines (such as someone reverse-engineering the .prc format).
Re: Kindle book pricing, etc.
Date: 2007-12-02 01:08 am (UTC)Pretty soon, somebody is going to do it right. By that time either the price will be closer to $200, or the size will be A5 or even A4.
You forgot about eInk
Date: 2008-04-04 03:25 am (UTC)Re: You forgot about eInk
Date: 2008-04-08 06:15 am (UTC)