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October, 2009 Monthly archive

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OK. Now we’re talking.

I would buy this device. I know it only does books — a one trick pony. But it let’s you lend your books to oth­ers and it doesn’t look like a Texas Instru­ments cal­cu­la­tor. This device looks like BN hired some prod­uct design­ers and some inter­face design­ers, and a mar­ket­ing crew that knows how to do point-of-purchase.

Barnes and Noble have lis­tened to the crit­i­cism of the Kin­dle and have brought a more sophis­ti­cated and attrac­tive device into the fray.

  • The price is rea­son­able from the start.
  • Design is clean.
  • Multi-touch.
  • Color nav­i­ga­tion panel (for swip­ing through book cov­ers, a la iTunes)
  • You can buy it in a BN store. (many dis­tri­b­u­tion points — one a few blocks from me)
  • You can browse dig­i­tal books
  • You can lend your book to oth­ers on a num­ber of devices
  • It has a mem­ory expan­sion slot
  • It can play MP3’s
  • It can read PDF’s (essential)

Did I men­tion that the design is clean? The device is a bit thicker and weighs more than the Kin­dle. The other impor­tant part is mov­ing away from pro­pri­etary formats.

I’ll be head­ing down to the Barnes and Noble to check it out. I’ll let you know if I am as impressed when I can touch it.

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Nook, eBook Reader, eBook Device - Barnes & Noble

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The buzz about an Apple tablet has been con­stant for some time. The pre-emptive strike recently by Microsoft — announc­ing its upcom­ing tablet called Courier has only cre­ated more buzz. Who will have he killer device?

Well Apple of course.

I don’t say that just because I use Apple prod­ucts. I say it because Apple cre­ates prod­ucts that change the way we do things. Apple’s suc­cess with the ipod was giv­ing peo­ple a device that had not only inno­v­a­tive hard­ware design but an engine inside and on your lap­top that changed the way almost every­one buys, man­ages, plays, and shares music. They trans­formed buy­ing and dis­tri­b­u­tion of music as data.

Then the iPhone. Another device that has changed the way peo­ple think about how they inter­act with the inter­net and 3rd party devices. They cre­ated more than a phone; in fact the iPhone is a mini com­puter that just hap­pens to let you make phone calls. Just ask ATT, they can’t keep up with the data streams as iPhone users are con­tantly con­nected using the device to instant mes­sage, surf the net, buy tick­ets, find out what restau­rants are nearby, and play rich inter­ac­tive games.

So now every­one is wait­ing for the tablet.

Microsoft has tried to own the buzz by releas­ing videos of its upcom­ing tablet. Actu­ally two tablets that fold.

It’s a hand­held com­puter. Ok.
It does mult-touch, cool.
It uses a sty­lus too. Nice.
It uses drag and drop. So Apple.
It’s nice. They’ll sell a bunch I’m sure.

But what does it bring that changes every­thing? Nothing.

Then we start to hear a bit more about the Apple tablet, expected to make it’s debut in early 2010.

A new device that is set on chang­ing or maybe sav­ing another dinosaur indus­try. Pub­lish­ing. What do you think that Ama­zon has done that with the Kindle?

News­pa­pers and pub­lish­ers are in the tar pit. They don’t have the slight­est idea how to change the way they deliver their con­tent. Fee­ble efforts by news­pa­pers have failed. Ama­zon brought us the Kin­dle as a vehi­cle to increase prod­uct sales but it’s a one trick pony and the price is too high.

So, I’m look­ing to one of the most inno­v­a­tive com­pa­nies we have right now.

Apple.

I don’t think they will disappoint.

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