Freescale's Cheap Chip Could Mean Sub-$99 E-Readers
eldavojohn writes "Last week, Freescale Semiconductor announced their i.MX508 chip and a few days ago released a rather bland and boring announcement that it's available. But there was at least one interesting line from that press release, 'The i.MX508 applications processor is expected to be priced at less than $10 (USD) in quantities greater than 250K units.' Yes, less than ten dollars. This sparked a wave of articles detailing how this new chip will allow the sub-$99 e-reader to emerge and according to market research, consumers are thirsty for something much more affordable than the Kindle."
I seriously doubt it's the processor that's causing the Kindle to be so high priced. It's most likely the costs of using the e-ink screens.
Except most consumers don't care about something being "open".
Most consumers just want ease of use. If it requires too many steps, then it's not going to sell well.
$99 netbooks exist. Google for chinese mips based netbooks.
For pleasure-reading, I completely agree.
But I want to go to classes with my e-reader and some paper, instead of my body weight in textbooks (which I may or may not need that day). I don't care about "enhanced content" (who actually uses the CD that comes with hardcover textbooks?) .. just give me a note-taking application, a good calculator and possibly access to my email.
>by sacrificing things like onboard wireless (which adds ~$40 to the cost of the Kindle).
Its not wifi chips that are expensive its the EVDO and the deal Amazon has with Sprint that's expensive. I dont need a EVDO ebook reader. Wifi is good enough. Just give me an offline option if I cant get it on wifi someplace (copy file to USB drive and insert it into ebook reader). Really, there's a huge hole in the market for sub $150 dollar ebook readers. Its probably doable with a smaller eink screen and lack of bell and whistles. The Sony pocket edition reader is pretty close.
Plus, they're great for reading in bed. Anyone who's tried to read lying on their side knows how much of an *enormous* pain in the ass regular paper books are. It's just not doable. But an ereader is perfectly comfortable.
Bookshelves full of books look nicer than YAGLAOTKC, (yet another gizmo laying around on the kitchen counter)... :-p
"A revolution without dancing is... a revolution not worth having"
Obviously, you are wrong. I mean, that's why the iPod failed, why iTunes hasn't sold more than a handful of songs, and why Linux has 95% of the desktop marketshare.
It's like you live in an alternate reality or something!
Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
They could also burn money and give stuff away for free.
Loss leaders are not generally a good idea if you want to make progress in business.
I think this race to the bottom with prices is really foolish. It forces the gadget maker to cut corners and quality and do all sorts of silly stuff. Competing on rock bottom prices is for suckers.