Amazon.com CEO Jeff Bezos on Charlie Rose, Explaning The Kindle
His laugh is what gets me everytime, the 10-years notwithstanding. Here’s how a FastCompany story from 2001 described it: “His laugh, which…
His laugh is what gets me everytime, the 10-years notwithstanding. Here’s how a FastCompany story from 2001 described it: “His laugh, which…
Well, it’s not an Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) product but you might call it an iPod for books: Joseph Weisenthal from our sister site PaidContent was…
Unless you’ve been enjoying an early start on your Thanksgiving vacation, you couldn’t avoid reading about Amazon’s newest effort to purvey their wares, the Kindle reader. Some are even calling it “Reading 2.0”.
BusinessWeek threw down the gauntlet with their “Buy Amazon – Kindle is the iPod of books” story today. That is a brazen statement to make and requires a response, though it’s reassuring they admit Apple is still setting the bar.
What the Kindle is:
What the Kindle is not:
In essence, you’re paying Amazon $400.00USD for the privilege of buying more books and content from Amazon that can – for the most part – only be used on their device. And, while I write-for and enjoy reading TAB, I’m not sure it’s worth a buck a month to be viewed in RSS-feed-form in four whole shades of gray, especially since my monthly subscription fees for all blogs I’d want access to – if Amazon is gracious enough to let me view them – would be more than my AT&T iPhone plan charges.
How anyone can claim that the Kindle will be to books what the iPod was to audio or the iPhone is to … – well, the iPhone pretty much is in it’s own device class – is beyond me. I can easily load my own content on my iPod/iPhone (and my Sony PRS-500 for that matter). The iPod/iPhone is engineered beautifully and the user-interface is intuitive and well designed. Apple created an entire culture around their i-devices and succeeded – in part – because they hit the consumer market at the lowest common denominator (i.e. folks are far more likely to listen to music or watch videos than they are to read). My iPod and Sony Reader do not require me to have Internet access and my iPhone enables me to view the Internet even without EDGE access (provided I’m near Wi-Fi).
I’m no Jeff Bezos, and Amazon has innovated far more than I ever will, but I can’t help but believe that they released this device too early and have taken no lessons from those that have gone before. The Kindle will not have the same legacy as the iPod, but will, hopefully, spark further development in the e-book arena.
For now, the best Christmas present I can receive would be to see the Net’s code-twisters release the Kindle from it’s dysfunctional bondage (and make Sprint wish it never agreed to their partnership).
Full disclosure: Apart from being an happy iPod/iPhone user, I’m also a very pleased Sony PRS-500 owner.
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