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Is Amazon Harming the E-reader Category? (teleread.com)

An anonymous reader sends a story from TeleRead which argues that Amazon doing harm to the e-reader category of devices it helped create. The company has been aggressively pushing adoption of its Kindle Fire brand of tablets, dropping the price for the cheapest model down to $50. Compare that to the basic version of the e-ink Kindle: $80 if you don't want it cluttered with "special offers." If you care enough about an e-ink screen, you might still buy it, but most of those people probably already have e-readers. The general populace, when looking at the tablet's color screen, app ecosystem, and access to forms of entertainment beyond books, will probably consider the tablet a no-brainer.

This is in Amazon's best interest; if you buy an e-reader, you're only going to be buying books for it. If you buy a tablet, they can sell you videos and software, too. Amazon has succeeded in pushing several competing e-readers out of the market. They also refuse to experiment or innovate on the design; there have been no significant changes since the Paperwhite's backlighting technology in 2012. Given that ebook sales are no longer growing explosively, this could be a sign that the e-reader category of devices is stagnating.

6 of 200 comments (clear)

  1. Cluttered? by chispito · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's not "cluttered" with special offers. It shows you a full screen ad before you unlock it, and it shows you small banner at the bottom of your home screen. They aren't obtrusive in any way. When you're reading, they're not there. LCD screens are cheaper than e-ink because they are produced in such higher quantities.

    --
    The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
  2. Re:It's a niche product. by chispito · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you mean buttons for page turns, the Voyage still has tactile buttons along the edges.

    --
    The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
  3. Re:It's a niche product. by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 4, Informative

    The dedicated ebook reader is for people who - you guessed it - read books.

    Thats it. My wife is on her second kindle, and she was happy with the first one, I just couldn't think of another Christmas gift and figured she'd like the paperwhite.

    The sales rate may be that the E-readers simply are very good products with a much longer use cycle. They don't get OS updates, or need new features. They do what they do, and do it well, and you can read books today perfectly fine on a first generation EReader.

  4. Re:It's the Ownership Stupid by Eponymous+Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Illegal? Maybe, maybe not: http://gizmodo.com/its-perfect...

    It might be illegal but I don't have an ethical problem with stripping DRM from books I purchase.

  5. Re:either way you're locked in ... by Whorhay · · Score: 3, Informative

    Most ebooks sold by amazon aren't downloaded in a DRM'd format. And I hope you're joking about the difficulty of getting ebooks from other sources, Project Gutenberg has tons of stuff and many publishers seem to have stores. I just use the USB cable that came with my Paperwhite to connect it to my computer and then drag and drop my ebook files to the ereader. I would presume that most other ereaders work in the same fashion.

  6. Re:Amazon App tablets let you app apps! by gaiageek · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you're ok with a smaller form factor, you could get a YotaPhone. Android phone with a 5" AMOLED screen on one side, 4.7" e-Ink screen on the other.

    Given the trend in larger and larger screen sizes on phones (which I'm not a fan of but whatever), I wouldn't be surprised if the next iteration of their devices is 5.5" or higher.