Amazon Hobbles Features For International Kindle
Barence writes "Amazon has stripped several key features out of the international edition of the Kindle, PC Pro has discovered. Newspapers and magazines are delivered without any photos, and the web browser has been disabled, presumably because Amazon doesn't want to foot the data bill. There's also a 40% premium on books bought via the Amazon store. 'International customers do pay a higher price for their books than US customers due to higher operating costs outside of the US,' an Amazon spokesperson confessed."
1) The browser is not a "key feature" - it's barely useable and not an advertised/supported feature anyway.
2) Calling the Amazon explanation a "confession" seems a little biased...sounds quite reasonable to me to charge more if their costs are higher.
---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"
... is still better than unavailable, which is the current state of the Kindle here in Canada (we don't even get the "International" version)
That is Marketing Droid speak for
Lets screw everyone else.
I fail to understand the reasoning for this in places where Amazon already has a huge operation (eg UK)
Ah well, If they screw us up so much then people will find a way to get, sorry pirate or hack the US Editions and then watch Amazon cry fould as the whole thing is a mega flop just like the Zune is outside the US.(just an example)
When will the so called international companies really view the world as one big market and 'do the right thing'.
I certainly won't be buying one of these. I urge others to boycott them until the functionality is restored.
I'd rather be riding my '63 Triumph T120.
What is to stop someone from buying "American" book and reselling them to European customers for, say, only a 10% markup?
Oh, let me guess - no interoperability / not an open format.
A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
Amazon sent out an email this morning to people who bought an International Kindle (mine arrived yesterday) informing them that they had dropped the price by $20 and would be applying a $20 refund to my credit card. With this kind of customer service, I buy even my groceries from Amazon these days; no need to venture outside. I suspect that this is also fighting back against the Nook.
Read my blog: HansMast.com
The books need to be converted from the NTSC format that America uses to the inferior PAL system that European books use.
Why figth against a stupid corp like Amazon, if you can simply use real books (no DRM here, you can give then to your friends, sell, etc) or use a better - and open - option like one netbook with PDF reader? For me, Kindle is a expensive and useless toy.
Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
Amazon did have to lay the cable across the oceans to deliver said books. You gotta pony up!
Sorry, but the one charging you that is your provider in the US. Within Europe, the roaming charges have a lega limit (per mb, minute or sms). Even when I was using my chilean phone in Germany I ended up paying a reasonable amount (~US$200 for 3 weeks). I think you are pointing your darts at the wrong place...
The whole point of the kindle is that it has wireless GSM access built in.... and sadly you can't change it to a local Euro carrier. There is no SIM card to swap. Nice try, though.
Something like this, I imagine:
V0 1 0 AC 1 SIN(0V 1V 60HZ)
R1 1 2 470
C1 2 0 220 U
Can you be Even More Awesome?!
books are not taxed, ebooks are treated as books
So why do I get the feeling I am being lied to?
politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
[b]There's nothing inherently wrong with adjusting your product for the market your selling in.[/b]
Then there should be nothing inherently wrong with me buying a product in any market available to me to buy from.
A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
Was amazon really too stupid to contact vodafone or orange and get a plan from them. I mean really why would they actually pay roaming charges with AT&T. Its not like they bought the kindles from AT&T and AT&T locked them :D
Really - I remember everyone having orgasms about the fact that the PlayStation II was going to have a browser and that was going to take over the world. If you are going to buy a Kindle you are not thinking about surfing the Internets, you're thinking about reading books in the same way as you're thinking about playing games on the PSII.
No photos is a bit sucky though.
And the high price thing - meh. Ve Europeans vill nevargh geev oop our reediculous high prices! It is ze mark of civilization!
"And the meaning of words; when they cease to function; when will it start worrying you?"
Here's a brilliant idea, DON'T BUY IT! Here is a WANT(read: not NEED) that costs way too much for it's purpose and is hobbled every time the lawyers gets a scent of blood or a penny. Vote with the only thing these corp's care about, your money! Stop being the consumption drone the media tells you to be!!!!
Too much to ask, I guess. Gotta get the new Droid...oh my, it's a phone, too? And the new Lana Johannah album, she's hawt! And of course, them 20" rims for the Prius, they save batteries cuz they are cooler!
Imagination drew in bold strokes, instantly serving hopes and fears, while knowledge advanced by slow increments...
Well, I bought the international Kindle, and I got it this morning. And nothing of what was mentioned in TFA is new to me: Amazon's website makes it very clear that I wouldn't get the internets on my Kindle and that newspaper and magazine subscriptions are delivered without pictures. The only piece of information that isn't blatantly obvious, but which can be determined with some fiddling, is that book prices differ: I am in Latin America and it looks like almost every book is exactly US$ 2 more expansive than in the American store.
I am slightly more concerned about the limited availability of current books. Browsing the store, I have access to a ton of public domain books, Penguin Classics (that is, even more public domain books) and a very limited selection of not very interesting recent books (I will never understand how Americans can be against health care and be so damn proud of it, but it's their problem not mine). Forget about most works by living authors, in particular serious writers. You can buy "Twilight" though.
But, I was aware of everything before I bought the Kindle. Nobody was cheated out of features. I am taking a gamble that availability of books will improve with time, but taking this risk was my own choice.
The thing about the Kindle is that shipping and handling can be really expensive internationally. If those US$ 2 are saving me about US$ 15 of S&H charges per book, I am happy. It would be nice if I could buy the books for the same prices as the American store, but proportionally, from a price perspective, buying books via the Kindle makes more sense here than in the US.
Amazon can kiss my fat, hairy, unwiped ass in that case. I won't be buying that piece of crap if that is how Amazon are going to fuck people living outside the US.
If that's true (I don't know whether it is), then it violates the GSM standard and European open access regulations - to promote competition, you aren't allowed to sell GSM devices in Europe that don't have swappable SIM cards. (The US version is CDMA, and doesn't have a SIM card, but that's not what we're talking about here.)
The headline (and linked article) are unclear. Are pictures stripped from newspapers/magazines (a) on the international Kindle, no matter where it is used; or (b) on a Kindle only when used outside of the USA?
The difference is significant. I was considering getting an international Kindle even though I live in the USA - so that it would work on trips. But, if my daily NYTimes has no pictures, then forget it. If the Times has pictures while I'm at home, but none when I'm in London, that is still annoying, but much less so.
And no, the Amazon web site doesn't say anything about the picture issue.
If the international kindle used wi-fi instead the problem of high data charges on a roaming US sim is gone. Or partner with a local GSM network. Am i missing something here? >> because this seems like a simple problem to solve.
That's nuts if even true. I am in India right now with Kindle iPhone, and it all looks the same price to me...so why would anyone "international" even go that route? None of Amazon's logic makes sense when looked at through the iPhone app...
I think therefore I can't be ~TTNH
The whole point of the kindle is that it has wireless GSM access built in....
I thought the whole point of it was to read books. I'm not sure why that would require any sort of wireless access.
... and then they built the supercollider.
I concur. Also, supporting cyrilic alphabet seems to be very low priority. Well, more than 300 M people use it, so yhea f...k them!
I'm very interested in this Kindle because I live in Australia where we are so lucky to have a thriving protectionist policy that results in ALL books costing 50-60% more! If I can buy them even at 40% more via Amazon on a Kindle then I'm winning!
But I too am trying to understand the 40% book markup comment? I can't see any different prices on Kindle titles on Amazon.com, but I can see the fine print which says all books are priced in US dollars, which actually suits me find.
Currently I often use Amazon.com and pay the $20-$30 shipping to get my books, and even including that cost it's cheaper than sourcing them locally!
Kindle / Nook - bring it on!