Amazon Kindle To Get Apps and EA Games
Lanxon writes "Amazon currently encourages publishers and authors to sell their books and magazines digitally, but the upcoming Kindle Development Kit (KDK), which goes into beta next month, says Wired, will allow software developers to create a variety of different applications. Amazon has already confirmed a Zagat guide for restaurant reviews from Hallmark and a selection of word games and puzzles, such as Sudoku, from Sonic Boom. EA Mobile is also set to release games on the Kindle."The kit itself is expected to be available next month.
People can already SSH into their Kindles. If I were Amazon, I would be worried about this kind of support making jailbreaks more attractive, possibly putting a nail into the coffin of their future ebook sales.
I agree any app that has any sort of interactivity will be sluggish. It does sequential reading well
The refresh rate on current models will really limit this. Might be ok for crossword puzzles and sudoku.
Although the current way it allows books to be read is fairly limited, (table of contents, basic search) the article mentioned more interactive books, such as cookbooks. And this might be where it will be useful.
Zagat guides are already available on the Kindle, so I presume they're looking to update the book content. I really can't see what else they'd want to do.
As you say, games are going to be pretty basic. The Kindle already has minesweeper, and that pushes it's abilities.
Developers are in for a major challenge, and many of them are likely going to decide, and rightly so, that the Kindle isn't the right platform for them.
Because it didn't make it to /. but is relevant: Amazon's Press Release about Royalty Hikes from yesterday.
Matching Apple's 70% royalties is another major sign of Amazon's Apple envy- but also a strong financial incentive for authors and publishers to be "well behaved" when pricing their Kindle books, as in keep prices lower than paper, offer TTS, etc.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_kindle#Content_sources
Maybe you mean HandMark!! :)
One thing that is an absolute pain is that the Kindle has no folder management, and as such, no way to organize the books that are downloaded. Sure, it'll hold 3000 e-books, but try paging through the list. And the startup time is proportional to the length of the list.
Opening up the e-book application interface would go a long way to getting features that Amazon seems disinclined to provide themselves.
The Kindle application framework is Java based. You write "booklets" that work like Java applets. Under the hood the Kindle runs a Linux kernel, so in theory you could just write native C apps, but I doubt Amazon will give developers access to that.
Some more info about hacking your Kindle:
http://igorsk.blogspot.com/2007/12/hacking-kindle-part-3-root-shell-and.html