Special Pages - Reports

Monday, August 8, 2011

PC Magazine relays tablet ideas from 'multiple sources'

PC Magazine's Tim Bajarin relays coming-tablet talk from "multiple sources"

Not tremendously exciting but Tim Bajarin is passing along what he's hearing.  In essence:

  . center of its design would be on reading books
  . sources say Amazon is using pretty low-cost parts and not using any
      of the major manufacturers.
  . key goal: make the tablet "very inexpensive"
      "as much as 20 to 25 percent below cost"
  . use a new business model to 'own' the Android tablet market
      (not targeting Apple)
  . go for usual low-cost razor idea, with Android Appstore, streaming movie
      and music services as the blades
  . apply users' purchases to their tablet through a 2-yr amortized
      program to cover lost physical cost of tablet and more
  . add in Cloud service revenue + advertising...

As he says, this is what he hears is being 'highly considered.'

This matches general speculations for the last two months.
But with the 'very inexpensive' mantra (definitely a 'prayer'), Amazon may be in a spot if they don't intend this.  And yet, Barnes and Noble has done that with the 7" NookColor (essentially a tablet, or at least many of us use it that way), with its gorgeous screen, at the $250~ price point.

  Amazon would need to make a screen at least as good as that one, in my view.  I am hoping its book-reading capabilities for any 7" tablet will have more basic features (Landscape mode and Zoom-in on images) than the NookColor does, but that's just my own hope there.

  Since Amazon does this with slower e-Ink screens and they do not have to conform to Adobe specs for DRM'd books, they should be able to add these features.  I really like my NookColor but am frustrated that for books with art/history illustrations, I can't zoom in nor view anything in Landscape mode on the smaller screens (even a 7" one is small, alongside a 10" tablet, though nicely portable).

 But Amazon offers so many more features in its e-Ink models than competing models (except touch screen, for now), I would think they'd include more features in their tablet reading too.

  Reminder: With tablets speculation, we're talking about LCD models here, and not the e-Ink devices that are so good for reading outdoors.

Photo credit: digimind.nl



For daily free ebooks, check the following links:
Temporarily-free books -
Non-classics
- USA: by:
NEW:  June  July  Aug 2011
   Publication Date   Late-listed
   Bestselling   High-ratings

UK: PubDate   Popular
What is 3G? and "WiFi"?       Battery Care
Highly-rated under $1,  Newest: $1-$2, $2-$3
Most Popular Free K-Books
U.S. & Int'l (NOT UK):
   Top 100 free
UK-Only:
   Top 100 free
USEFUL for your Kindle (U.S. only, currently):
  99c Notepad 1.1,   99c Calculator,
  99c Calendar,   99c Converter


Kindle 3's   (UK: Kindle 3's)   K3 Special ($114)   K3-3G Special ($139)   DX Graphite

1 comment:

  1. "apply users' purchases to their tablet through a 2-yr amortized
    program to cover lost physical cost of tablet and more"

    Which is exactly what Amazon has avoided doing with Kindle by not requiring users to pay a subscription fee (what this would amount to, as the only way this can work to recover selling below production price is by requiring a minimum number of purchases).

    ReplyDelete

NOTE: TO AVOID SPAM being posted instantly, this blog uses the blogger.com "DELAY" feature.

Am often away much of the day, and postings won't show up right away. Posts done to use referrer-links may never show up.

Usually, am online enough to release comments within a day though, so the hard-to-read match-text tests for commenting won't be needed this way.

Feedback and questions are welcome. Thanks for participating.

Technical Problems?
If you're having problems leaving a Comment, Google's blogger-help asks that you clear the 'blogger.com' cookies on your browser's Tools or Options menu bar and that will fix the Comment-box problems (until they have a permanent fix).

IF that doesn't work either, then UNcheck the "keep me signed in" box -- Google-help says that should allow your comment to post (it's a workaround to a current bug).
Apologies for the problems.

TIP: There's a size limit. If longer than 3500 characters or so, in a text editor, make two posts out of it.