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Barnes and Noble has a new pro­mo­tion that will give you a nook for free if you sub­scribe to the NYTimes or Peo­ple mag­a­zine for a year.

Smart move by two com­pa­nies. Not a bad idea for Peo­ple either.

Both should ben­e­fit from their brand equity.

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Nook is the tablet with the power. The Kin­dle Fire is a bud­get reader to sell from the Ama­zon Store. The Nook, that’s another story. Ama­zon will get the bud­get mar­ket with peo­ple that think it is more.

With the Nook Color, Barnes & Noble hit on the first win­ning tablet strat­egy not pat­terned after the iPad. With firmware updates, B&N steadily improved the capa­bil­ity of the device, adding Flash, games, and Android apps. Now, though, media heavy­weight Ama­zon is look­ing to fol­low the same strat­egy to blow Barnes & Noble out of the water.

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The Fire is a fiendishly effec­tive shop­ping por­tal in the guise of a 7-inch slate.

— Wired.com

 

We always thought that Ama­zon should have been giv­ing away the Kin­dle to get folks hooked. Apparently they finally got that idea into Beta. With the Kin­dle you got a reader although a clunky device — no ele­gant indus­trial design offered. But now you get a sleeker lit­tle tablet that really isn’t worth much unless  pay $79 a year.

In depth review at Wired.com 

 

We sug­gest you take a look at the Nook at $249. it does every­thing you could hope for in a pow­er­ful lit­tle tablet.

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The Nook price dropped this week and was fol­lowed shortly after by a new Kin­dle model and a slightly lower price. The new Kin­dle  still looks like a cheap cal­cu­la­tor and the price is still too high. But now you can get it in gray. We like the Nook better.

nook >

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b-and-n-nook-press_8

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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