Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Kindle News: Amazon Cloud Player app ready for iPhone & iPod touch. Amazon to open Android app stores in Europe. Google makes major e-book deal with France. Len Edgerly's The Kindle Chronicles adds lots of Kindle news and interviews

Amazon Cloud Player app is now available for iPhone and iPod touch at the iTunes appstore.

For those of you with iPads, Amazon announced today that the Amazon Cloud Player for iOS app can now be downloaded from iTunes.

  The Amazon app is of course free, and Amazon customers, globally, get 5 GB of cloud storage for free.

All mp3's that are bought from Amazon do not count against storage maximums, so essentially they always come with free storage and, for U.S. customers at this point (maybe more later), streaming from Amazon servers.

Their press release said that "those who purchase any storage plan will receive unlimited space for MP3 and AAC (.m4a) music files at no additional cost."  Normally, that's $20 per year when they have unlimited-storage offers.

  With the app, you can download or stream your library from the cloud or play the music already on your device.  It also allows you to create and edit playlists, play music in the background, "or use Bluetooth to stream your music in your house or car."

Amazon Appstore to hit Europe this summer
3G.co.uk's Simon D Thomas is the latest of many who've been writing stories about Amazon's Appstore's expected expansion to Europe during the summer.

  The Kindle Fire has not been sold internationally, so their sales have been missing a very big market.  And many outside the US have been understandably impatient with Amazon for not having made it available.  Thomas gives some reasons why it's not happened yet:
' The problem for Amazon has been that they need to make fresh agreements for books, music and movies in every market they launch.  This can be hugely complicated and takes a huge amount of time, but it looks like Amazon have been slowly making progress. '
The site is realistic and balanced in their reviews although Thomas has a certain enthusiasm shown in his "In the US the Amazon Kindle Fire has proved hugely successful due [to] its low price-point ($200 or £150) and is thought to have prompted a response from Apple (iPad Mini) and Google (Google Nexus Tablet).  We hope it comes to the UK because it offers such amazing value that it would change our tablet market forever !"

Amazon has been making large gains with LoveFilm, the European Netflix equivalent, and I imagine that this has something to do with streaming that would become available for Kindle Fire in Europe.

Google and the e-book deal with the publishing industry in France
paidContent's Jeff John Roberts reports that Google's major deal with French authors and publishers, announced yesterday, to sell digital copies of out of print books (scanned by Google) ended a 6-year legal dispute.

  He points out in his first article on this yesterday that France passed a law this spring "that creates a new royalty collection mechanism for out-of-print works that will be owned in part by the state and managed in part by the Biliothèque nationale.

  Fair payment will always be the important factor here!  In the U.S., Google had scanned millions of books BEFORE getting permissions and there was the matter of how much control they would have over these.  A federal court rejected in 2010 the Google Books Settlement reached with some of the affected, and "Harvard Librarian Robert Darnton and others are calling for the creation of 'a digital library of America'."

The report yesterday goes into detail on how this will work -- the ground rules.

In Roberts' article today, the focus is on how this Agreement could hurt the growth of Amazon Kindle in Europe.
' According to reports in Le Figaro and publishing site ActuaLitté, the agreement does not allow the publishers to distribute the digital books through Google’s direct competitors — read: Amazon. '
That has a slightly familiar ring to it.  Big Bad Monopolist Amazon (as well as others) would be foiled again before it could really monopolize the e-book market place, the world saved from that by a small consumer-oriented company with little money and power.

  Roberts' take is that "If the Google e-books take off, Amazon will be the odd one out as the e-books can be read directly on devices made by Sony or Barnes & Noble or through the Google Play app on Apple devices."

The Nook is not sold internationally, however.

The point is iffy in that the Kindle Fire CAN read Google books directly!  He probably is focusing on e-Ink readers, but there is also the factor of reader loyalty and trust that is built on the quality of customer relations and service, and so far, we have seen how hard it is to phone or reach a human at Google when you need help.  Whenever I want to read an ePub book, I just pick up the Kindle Fire, which is priced reasonably, is very versatile and uses Android apps that read ePub books, including those with Adobe DRM via using the normal digital rights procedures.

We just saw, with the State Dept's $16.5 million contract with Amazon for Kindle Touch devices and support, how others who make buying decisions will look at more than the most basic features when money spent must be recorded and justified.

   In reviews of the e-Ink Nook and Kindle Touch devices, you'll see many reviewers mentioning these days mainly that a home page layout and a built-in led light makes the Nook the better reader, despite somewhat lowered display contrast,  and not telling their readers that unlike the Kindle, the Nook Touch has no web browser (the Kindle Touch's is quite serviceable) has no audio, therefore no text to speech or music, no X-Ray automated character search, no instant word translation (superb), no 3G wireless domestically or abroad and, most of all to some of us, it has no decent customer support policies.  The latter is really important when it comes to dealing with new digital media deivce problems.

  Roberts is right, though, that the e-ink readers that can read Google books directly will have the advantage there.  But he also points out that the Google Collection "is composed of out-of-print works which, by definition, exclude new books and bestsellers.  That means Amazon is still free to make a play for the most valuable part of the digital book market."
  There's nothing like good competition though, and that will help keep Amazon on its toes.

  It did surprise me that the French e-book market is worth only $38 million -- "or less than one percent of the country's $7.85 billion overall book market according to a new report.  He links to an article by Laura Owen, citing the costs involved and a lack of e-readers.


LEN EDGERLY'S THE KINDLE CHRONICLES PODCAST AND BLOG
Recently, as mentioned before, The Kindle Chronicles podcast with descriptive summaries, is now also a written blog (Len is  an excellent writer) and has TONS of Kindle information.

He's been reporting in detail, with enjoyable, balanced analysis, from BookExpo (BEA) and always has good Kindle tech tips and interesting interviews on an ongoing basis.

At BEA, he interviewed Russ Grandinetti, Amazon's VP of Kindle Content, taking a photo of Grandinetti for the blog interview (who doesnt look like your usual 'suit').  Engaging shot.

  The interview, on his podcast, starts at 23:38 into the mp3 audio and covers "a wide-ranging discussion of eBook pricing, Digital Rights Management, Kindle Singles [ab here: When I first saw this feature announced, I thought Amazon was branching out into dating services], social reading, and how much longer there will be a Kindle Keyboard in the lineup.  Rather than quote Grandinetti's response (which is nothing solid as that is not Amazon's style), I'll link you to the blog again so you can read it there and see what else is available.

Also interviewed recently is Eric Hellman, whose go to hellman blog is one of my favorites for thought-filled, informative, very clear pieces on what are normally considered complex topics.

The latest article is about Stephen King's apparent decision to publish, in June 2013, his latest novel, Joyland, in print form only.  Len writes:
' The author was quoted as saying, “Joyland will be coming out in paperback, and folks who want to read it will have to buy the actual book.”

The actual book? '

Exactly my thought.  What's a book but the organization of words selected from the author's mind?  Is an 'actual book' a cover design? The font style? The back cover blurbs? the type of paper?
  I'm probably over-flexible but isn't it the sequence of words and the organization of them that makes a book, whether in print or in digital-form?   It's so 'retro' to even imply that an e-book is not an 'actual book'  today.  The comments to the blog entry on King's decision are not sympathetic to King, and while that's a self-selecting group (e-book reading), it's also a group that will involve a lot of lost sales.  It's bizarre.

But, do check out Len's expanded http://thekindlechronicles.com for a treat.




Current Kindle Models for reference, plus free-ebook search links
US:
Kindle Fire  7" tablet - $199
Kindle NoTouch ("Kindle") - $79/$109
Kindle Touch, WiFi
- $99/$139
Kindle Touch, 3G/WiFi - $149/$189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189, Free, slow web
Kindle DX - $379, Free, slow web
UK:
Kindle Basic, NoTouch - £89
Kindle Touch WiFi, UK - £109
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi, UK - £169
Kindle Keyboard 3G, UK - £149
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB
OTHER International
Kindle NoTouch Basic - $109
Kindle Touch WiFi - $139
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi - $189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB

Check often: Temporarily-free recently published Kindle books
  Guide to finding Free Kindle books and Sources.  Top 100 free bestsellers.  Liked-books under $1
UK-Only: recently published free books, bestsellers, or £5 Max ones
    Also, UK customers should see the UK store's Top 100 free bestsellers.

  *Click* to Return to the HOME PAGE.  Or click on the web browser's BACK button Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

Monday, June 11, 2012

Kindle news: Amazon's contract with US State Dept for $16.5 million for Kindles, and why.

"Why is the U.S. State Department paying Amazon $16.5 million for Kindles?"

paidContent's Laura Hazard Owen reports that the U.S. State Dept signed a no-bid $16.5 million contract (anticipated value over the life of the contract -- one base year + 4 option years) with Amazon for Amazon Touches, starting with 2,500 of them, which will be preloaded with 50 titles each for the Department's overseas language-education programs.

Reasoning for the no-bid contract:
' In a document justifying the no-bid contract, the State Department says it’s identified “the Amazon Kindle as the only e-Reader on the market that meets the Government’s needs, and Amazon as the only company possessing the essential capabilities required by the Government.”  It has international 3G, text-to-speech features and a long battery life, which “other e-readers such as the Barnes and Noble Nook, the Sony Reader Daily and Kobe [sic] e-Reader cannot provide.” '

Well, the Nook can provide a long battery life, but it doesn't sell books internationally nor does it supply international 3G.  But then it doesn't supply domestic 3G either, anymore.  3G delivery of books was what initially made the Kindle E-Ink device so popular -- think about a book and then have it within 60 seconds.  B&N gave up on the 3G idea after trying it for awhile.

The overseas use made the international 3G "a firm requirement."  The Apple iPad wasn't chosen due to the additional features being unnecessary for educational use and bringing "unacceptable security and usability risks for the government's needs in this particular project."

  I can see why the iPad wouldn't be used for this when length of session battery life is so important.  They also mentioned that the iPad also falls short on "the centrally managed platform for registration and content delivery..."

See Owen's article for her puzzlement over why it would come to $16.5 million even over 5 years and her own thoughts as to other costs that would need to be paid beyond the cost of the Kindle Touch 3G and Kindle books for each one.  She cites operating and support costs (and Kindle owners know the relative merits of customer service among the e-reader companies).




Current Kindle Models for reference, plus free-ebook search links
US:
Kindle Fire  7" tablet - $199
Kindle NoTouch ("Kindle") - $79/$109
Kindle Touch, WiFi
- $99/$139
Kindle Touch, 3G/WiFi - $149/$189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189, Free, slow web
Kindle DX - $379, Free, slow web
UK:
Kindle Basic, NoTouch - £89
Kindle Touch WiFi, UK - £109
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi, UK - £169
Kindle Keyboard 3G, UK - £149
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB
OTHER International
Kindle NoTouch Basic - $109
Kindle Touch WiFi - $139
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi - $189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB

Check often: Temporarily-free recently published Kindle books
  Guide to finding Free Kindle books and Sources.  Top 100 free bestsellers.  Liked-books under $1
UK-Only: recently published free books, bestsellers, or £5 Max ones
    Also, UK customers should see the UK store's Top 100 free bestsellers.

  *Click* to Return to the HOME PAGE.  Or click on the web browser's BACK button Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Kindle News: New Kindle Fire Android-exclusive - HBO GO for HBO subscribers. PRIME instant-video count changes.

THE KINDLE FIRE GETS HBO-GO

An HBO-GO android app has been a big request by the Android community, and the Kindle Fire is the only Android tablet supported at this point although HBO has promised it'll upgrade its standard Android app eventually to include tablet support in general.  This is happening quite a bit.  The Verge's Nathan Ingraham says, "Kindle Fire users are the only ones with access for now."

HBO-GO is for HBO subscribers only, of course, and then it's only for subscribers to HBO's partner TV providers.  It seems Time Warner, and Armstrong also, may not be among them from what I see in the comments area where it's noted that they're not seen on the list of supported providers.

Some Comcast users are getting error alerts and some have solved the problem by using their password to log on with their computer at the website after which the app recognizes them for some reason, while another person recommends just searching for a movie you want and then logging in there on the Kindle Fire, which worked for him.

Outside of that it seems to work well, since the Kindle Fire does display Netflix and HuluPlus very well on a fast cable Internet setup, the quality of it surprising a couple of friends with iPad 3's.

There is a report that it can be sluggish when you want to advance or rewind.  That's sometimes true with my computer's otherwise fast access too.

What's offered:
Laptop Magazine's Anna Atkisson points out this has been available until now only on the iPad, and now Kindle Fire users won't need to miss episodes of Game of Thrones, Boardwalk Empire, True Blood, or any of HBO's 1,400 shows when they're away from home.

In her brief writeup, she emphasizes "video extras like interviews with the cast and crew.  And users can create a Watchlist of shows they need to catch up on, or create a season pass to shows they can't get enough of."  Better yet, she includes the full press release.

  The Release mentions that the "Series Pass" capability automatically loads the Watchlist with "new episodes of favorite HBO programs when they arrive on the service," and HBO customers "get new titles simultaneously with the premiere on the network, recaps and behind-the-scenes extras; customizable views showing titles in slideshows, grid, or list format, and the ability to pause, rewind and view at their convenience."

  Android Authority's Arnold Zafra says in his opening that this runs on no other Android tablet so far, not "even if the app was updated to run on ICS" (Ice Cream Sandwich OS).

HBO has uploaded a 30 second commercial that is VERY UNenlightening but which likes to say you can now "Play with Fire" and purrs "Now on Fire" :-)   (Note that Kindle-Edition blogs cannot view videos linked.)

Side Note  - In an Amazon PRIME free Instant Video search today, I saw that they now list 3,707 of these rather than the 17,000 to 20,000+ that used to be the referenced number.  It turns now that they used to count each TV show of a series as an individual video (which can make just as much sense as counting a year of individual shows as 'one video' -- but that's the change that should be noted.



Current Kindle Models for reference, plus free-ebook search links
US:
Kindle Fire  7" tablet - $199
Kindle NoTouch ("Kindle") - $79/$109
Kindle Touch, WiFi
- $99/$139
Kindle Touch, 3G/WiFi - $149/$189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189, Free, slow web
Kindle DX - $379, Free, slow web
UK:
Kindle Basic, NoTouch - £89
Kindle Touch WiFi, UK - £109
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi, UK - £169
Kindle Keyboard 3G, UK - £149
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB
OTHER International
Kindle NoTouch Basic - $109
Kindle Touch WiFi - $139
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi - $189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB

Check often: Temporarily-free recently published Kindle books
  Guide to finding Free Kindle books and Sources.  Top 100 free bestsellers.  Liked-books under $1
UK-Only: recently published free books, bestsellers, or £5 Max ones
    Also, UK customers should see the UK store's Top 100 free bestsellers.

  *Click* to Return to the HOME PAGE.  Or click on the web browser's BACK button Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

Amazon's Monthly Kindle Deals + ongoing Free Kindle Book features + newly discounted Kindle book alerts from the forums


JUNE 2012's 100 Kindle Deals, $1.99-$3.99

I highlight this monthly feature at or near the beginning of the month for newcomers and even oldcomers who don't know it exists.

Note: If you bookmark the page when you get there, that bookmark will work for subsequent months also.

These are Kindle books "hand-selected" by Amazon's Editors each month, and what you'll see on that special monthly-deals page are the new ones for June 2012.
(Link: amzn.to/100kbooks-2to4)


FREE KINDLE BOOKS (Non-classics) for June
In the meantime, I've updated the "Temporarily-free books -- Non-classics" search results for free contemporary Kindle books for JUNE, sorted by publication-date, as of today.   These include pre-orders for June.

Here are the current Search results for free Kindle non-classics, by publication date for May.


For newcomers: the usual Kindle Daily Deal, a different link each day, takes you to the latest book picked by Amazon as the deal of the day, usually an e-book they find worthwhile, discounted for one day by anywhere between 75-80%+.  Some are available to those outside the U.S. also.

Here's another reminder that's posted every few weeks for those new and olde to this site because there are many new visitors each day here who've never seen some of the subsets of free or bargain books available for searching and who wouldn't know about the several ongoing Amazon Kindle deals.



RECENT DISCOUNTS on Kindle book (some or most, temporarily, as promos), at kdisc0605-07:

There are usually a good number of well-regarded books normally priced at $8 to $12 newly showing up at a price of $0.99 to $2.99, with alerts from other Kindle owners posted in this forum message thread.  They include higher-priced books that drop only a few dollars, but for many, that can make the difference.


As an example, the most recent message thread page has this today:
American Tempest: How the Boston Tea Party Sparked a Revolution

Kindle owner LASoundCrafter posts the following description:
' Digital List $16.00, Now 1.29

On Thursday, December 16, 1773, an estimated seven dozen men, many dressed as Indians, dumped roughly £10,000 worth of tea in Boston Harbor.  Whatever their motives at the time, they unleashed a social, political, and economic firestorm that would culminate in the Declaration of Independence two-and-a-half years later.

The Boston Tea Party provoked a reign of terror in Boston and other American cities as tea parties erupted up and down the colonies.  The turmoil stripped tens of thousands of their homes and property, and nearly 100,000 left forever in what was history's largest exodus of Americans from America.  Nonetheless, John Adams called the Boston Tea Party nothing short of "magnificent," saying that "it must have important consequences."

Combining stellar scholarship with action-packed history, Harlow Giles Unger reveals the truth behind the legendary event and examines its lasting consequence--the spawning of a new, independent nation.'

My link above will start you from June 5th, in a huge thread that started eons ago, but you can of course go backwards there as well, and Amazon will keep track of the last page you read in that message thread .



FREE AND LOW-COST KINDLE BOOKS IN GENERAL
If you'd like to browse for current free books (especially non-classics) or lower-cost offerings from Amazon that are available on an ongoing basis (although the books themselves go off-sale quite quickly) but which newer visitors will not have seen before, here's some light browsing:

Links to Free Kindle Books - Non-Classics - available today
May 2012  June 2012 as mentioned above.
  Also included is a full list of currently free contemporary Kindle books that are sorted by:
   Publication Date   Bestselling
   High-ratings

   Amazon's Limited Time Free Promos

UKPublication Date   Popular


Most Popular Free K-Books:
  U.S. & Int'l (although NOT UK):
     Top 100 free
  UK-Only:
     Top 100 free



Free Kindle Books Guide
One of the most visited pages on this blog is the general Free Kindle Books Guide


Top 100 free Android apps, for Kindle Fire owners (who should check out the free app of the day each day)



PRIME Lending Library - borrowing books
  In the forums, I've found some who did not know that with the Prime membership,  which gets you free 2-day shipping on almost all of Amazon's own items (not so much 3rd party Marketplace items),  you not only have access to about 17,000 no-add'l-cost streaming videos (counting individual TV shows in series -- note that counting SETS will bring up "only" 3,707 PRIME instant movie/tv results today), you can also borrow one Kindle book per calendar month, from a choice of over 158,000 now, without dealing with waiting times or due-dates.

  Prime
's Lending Library:
     RulesBorrowing;
     How to Browse or search the now voluminous List
        Note:  When you borrow a Prime library book,
              you do this from your Kindle, at the Kindle's Kindle Store

                and not from the Amazon web pages.
        The BIG RED $0.00 you see on the product page for "Prime" cost
        means it's $0.00 to Borrow it, from the Kindle,
        and I wish that would be made clearer.


NOT FREE, BUT MOSTLY UNDER $1
Non-Classics under $1:
  Highly rated, under $1
  Amazon's specific mostly 99c Kindle Books page



OVER $1 BUT SPECIALLY FEATURED POPULAR BOOKS
There are also the monthly Kindle book deals, with 100 Editors' Choices priced at $1.99-$3.99, which I featured today.


CUSTOMER DISCUSSION THREADS
Ongoing or completed but informative popular discussions   (See Kindle Forums for more.)
  . Pros and Cons on WSJ report that the Justice Dept is looking at e-book price collusion
  . Are you sorry you bought a Fire?
  . Kindle touch or Kindle Keyboard
  . Kindle Fire for nonTech person?
  . Kindle Fire Keyboard.. Anyone else having issues?
  . Any happy Kindle Touch owners?
  . Kindle Fire video on airplane compared with iPad video, a tense thread :-)
  . Got my Fire!
  . Feel like almost crying - Kindle loss and personalizing Kindles - lighthearted
  . Unusual calls from Amazon because of forum posts
  . Personal docs now sendable to individual Kindles again
  . To Avoid Confusion, Please Use the Official Product Names in Forum" [entertaining]
  . Discussion of geographic restrictions on digital purchases
  . Discount-alert books discussed on separate message thread
  . What have been your favorite public domain books that are not so well known?
  . Best "Free" books you've read (many are no longer free, however).
  . Highly recommended Indie authors
  . Unique Uses of Kindles

Other current forum threads that might interest some
Public Library Lending questions at the forums:
  . How many e-books does your public library have?
  . Public librarians: what has been your Kindle/Overdrive experience?


KINDLE SUPPORT INFO page
The shortcut (link) is http://bit.ly/ksupportinfo.

  Help from other customers 24/7
  Also, if you need especially fast response to a problem you're having, the Kindle Community Forums are especially helpful, with Kindle owners willing to help and very knowledgeable, so that you can find an answer 24/7 quite often, worldwide.



Kindle-Edition subscribers to this blog, who get, on their Kindles, the most-recent 25 Kindleworld blog postings at any time, who've never visited the web page, might want to stop by briefly (Link: kindleworld.blogspot.com), to take a look at the right-hand column that holds earlier articles that can answer questions that many have had about any of the Kindle models, older or newer, plus info on how to make use of the many features not often described or publicized.
  Note: You can use Menu/Article Mode for eInk readers or use Reading View (eyeglasses icon on bottom status bar for Kindle Fire, to get webpage articles in very readable format without ads and link boxes.
  Thanks for your support and for visiting, either here, or via the Kindle edition, as well as for the helpful comments I get to blog items or in email.




Current Kindle Models for reference, plus free-ebook search links
US:
Kindle Fire  7" tablet - $199
Kindle NoTouch ("Kindle") - $79/$109
Kindle Touch, WiFi
- $99/$139
Kindle Touch, 3G/WiFi - $149/$189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189, Free, slow web
Kindle DX - $379, Free, slow web
UK:
Kindle Basic, NoTouch - £89
Kindle Touch WiFi, UK - £109
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi, UK - £169
Kindle Keyboard 3G, UK - £149
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB
OTHER International
Kindle NoTouch Basic - $109
Kindle Touch WiFi - $139
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi - $189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB

  *Click* to Return to the HOME PAGE.  Or click on the web browser's BACK button

Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

Monday, June 4, 2012

Kindle software update v4.1.0 ready for Kindle 4 No-Touch

 
New software update v4.1.0 for the Kindle Basic - No-Touch/No Keyboard today.

The Software v4.1.0 update for the $79/$109 No Touch Kindle (US)  is ready for download online as an option.  This is also the update for the UK model of the Kindle Basic, £89.

While the update is ready for manual download and install, it will be delivered automatically to your Kindle over WiFi if you prefer to wait for that.

If you'd rather get it sooner (it can take a couple of weeks sometimes), then follow the steps outlined at the download page to get it on your Kindle sooner.

Amazon's new features in this update (emphases mine):
  • Improved reading font that is higher contrast and crisper so that you can enjoy a paper-like reading experience.
  • Parental Controls that allow you to restrict access to the Experimental Web Browser, Archived Items, and the Kindle Store. *
  • Support for books with complex layouts and formats with Kindle Format 8.
  • Support for children's books with Kindle Text Pop-Up and comic books with Kindle Panel View (which allows you to read a comic book panel by panel). Books that support these features will be available in the Kindle store over the next few weeks.
  • Dictionaries grouped into a collection in Home and Archived Items called "Dictionaries" for better organization.
  • Improved table and image viewing (panning and zooming) on supported titles.
They don't specify, though, what "supported titles" are, how many are involved, the types of books, and whether that's decided by the publisher or by Amazon.

* Parental Control caution:
    When additional parental controls were added to the Kindle Fire in early May, I quoted a caution by "Old Rocker" at the Kindle Forums:
' Old Rocker Adds an interesting precaution
"I'm thinking that anyone who shares their [Kindle] may want to set up a parental control password [right away], but just allow everything in order to avoid a child or other user to accidentally turn on parental controls and set up a password, locking the owner out.  That happened to someone recently who posted about it on the forums." '
In fact it happened to many, so I took this advice and recommend that others do also.


For those who have been trying to decide on this basic model or another one:
  Remember that for this model, any searches for words, or any instructions needing typing such as location number or typing the first alpha character for a title look-up, will require use of an on-screen alphabetically-arranged keyboard-diagram pop-up, which is accessed via the front bottom controller button to "select" each character one by one.  It also has no audio and therefore no speakers :-), which further means no text-to-speech (TTS) but not many seem to use that feature.

However, it's only 6 oz's, is therefore very light and very small and may be fine for those who never plan to do regular searches or much keyboard input.  For some, size is very important, in snug purses, pockets, etc.  Truly portable even if not my own preference, as I use keyboards a lot for searches and the web.  The price is right too.

But, for those of you who already have the Kindle Basic No Touch, this update is fairly substantial. :-)




US:
Kindle Fire  7" tablet - $199
Kindle NoTouch ("Kindle") - $79/$109
Kindle Touch, WiFi
- $99/$139
Kindle Touch, 3G/WiFi - $149/$189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189, Free, slow web
Kindle DX - $379, Free, slow web
UK:
Kindle Basic, NoTouch - £89
Kindle Touch WiFi, UK - £109
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi, UK - £169
Kindle Keyboard 3G, UK - £149
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB
OTHER International
Kindle NoTouch Basic - $109
Kindle Touch WiFi - $139
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi - $189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB

  For daily free ebooks, check the following links:
Temporarily-free books - Non-classics
USA: by:
   Publication Date  
   Bestselling   High-ratings

UK: PubDate   Popular
The Kindle Daily Deal
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 Keyboard(U.S. only, currently):
  99c Notepad 1.1,   99c Calculator,
  99c Calendar,   99c Converter


  *Click* to Return to the HOME PAGE.  Or click on the web browser's BACK button Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Kindle News: Children's illustrated classics-narration+music at $0.99 each. Kindle Fire Reading View. Big3 publishers ending Agreements with Apple? Dilbert+Doonesbury Exclusive. Kindle Fire Best E-Reader? Amazon gets Digital Gift patent. Borrowing from the Library. Nook Classic converts "Kindled" to "Nookd" in text. UK review of Kindle Touch. UK Bookseller tries to ban Kindles. - UPDATE on Dilbert book

(Apologies for the long title, but rather than do many blog entries which could get the blog credit for many more website views -- and for lots of blog entries -- I put what I found into one lengthy entry.)

Note: Kindle Edition blog subscribers can use Menu/Article Mode to read the stories more easily when clicking through the news links.

47 CHILDREN'S CLASSIC EBOOKS FOR $0.99 each - for a limited time
47 children's classic e-books for Kindle for $0.99 each, on a limited time basis, from Rabbit Ears, normally sold for over $7 each.  The Kindlepost blog did not say when the offer expires though.
  They are illustrated and include music and narration by various celebrities.
  While these are for Kindle Fire, SOME of them will work with the Kindle for Android app as well.  You can check the latter on the product page under device availability near the top.

I see a review showing Robin Williams narrating Pecos Bill, but this doesn't show up in the product description for some reason.

KINDLE FIRE'S WEB BROWSER "READING VIEW"
As many know, when you're reading a web page on the Kindle Fire, and you want to read a particular story, clicking on it, but find the type too small or there's too much junk surrounding it, you can look at the bottom status line and probably see the "eyeglasses" icon which, if you click on it, will put you in to Reading View mode.  It is very slick.

I just read a review of the Kindle Fire which said that the new Reading View "doesn't stitch together multiple pages of a story into one, instead only yielding a large-type ad-free version of the current page."
  I explained the following in a comment:
' It does, though. You just swipe up to read the rest of the piece below.  It's actually very smooth.  I had chosen to use Dolphin HD browser instead of Amazon's Silk, but with this new Reading View, I've switched to Silk because it's very effective. '

THREE OF THE BIG6 PROBABLY TERMINATING THEIR AGREEMENT WITH APPLE
Good E-Reader's Mercy Pilkington points out that the three publishers who settled with the DOJ and various state class action lawsuits will have, "pending a wait period," just "one week to terminate their agreement with Apple on how much ebooks will cost."
 Pilkington says "the coming month is when the 60-day wait period on the settlement will expire" and soon there are likely to be discussions between retailers and the publishers about changed pricing for eBooks -- and few expect the pricing would go up :-)


DILBERT AND DOONESBURY ANNIVERSARY SETS EXCLUSIVELY ON KINDLE FIRE


These are two new anthologies marking anniversaries (Dilbert's 20th, Doonesbury's 40th): the Dilbert 2.0 set of four books and the Doonesbury Retrospective set of four.

NOTE: The Dilbert strip shown above stresses that you need to double-click on a strip frame to enlarge it for readability.  Then you tap the right edge to move to the next frame.   To normalize the strip size, double-click on the current frame to toggle the resizing off.
  Having said that, I noted that the Dilbert strips leave margins on the sides and top and so they could be larger.  Needing to enlarge them can halt the flow of reading, but these short strips are readable as-is unless you need very large fonts.
  The Doonesbury images enlarge to leave no margins, and from what I saw in the Sample (no actual strip was shown which means I won't be buying one unless they make a sample that shows an actual strip), they make better use of space when enlarging the images.

  ALSO, I did buy the Dilbert The Dot-Com Bubble and found that there is NO BOOKMARKING of pages or table of contents with links.  In fact Scott Adam's history of his experiences for the years covered by this volume, takes up about 25% of that book and the only way I could get to the cartoons was to find the starting location and press MENU/GoTo and type in Location 1325 to get to the starting cartoon in that book.
  It does keep track of the last page read though.

Dilbert UPDATE - I should re-emphasize that the comics, once they begin in these books, are readable as-is, for most, and that the frame enlargements if needed are done by double-clicking on a frame and then pressing the right-edge to advance to the next frame while the rest of it darkens.

I think that a customer reviewer actually was referring to comics referenced in Scott Adams' introduction and personal history in which samples are shown but these actually are not readable and probably aren't meant to be.  (Those threw me initially but I found that the 75% main course is easily readable without the double-click enlargements --  I'd thought at first that they were the ones meant to be read.)  Other customer-reviewers are upset because the Dilbert 2.0 series is not available except on the Kindle Fire currently and they give it 1-star ratings as a result but weren't reviewing the book itself.

I'm adding this update because many Dilbert fans will very likely enjoy the author's personal history of the decade for each set in the series and I'm enjoying his comments on many of the comics chosen for the book - giving the reason he chose them and some facts behind the comic strip being shown.  Most will know he's pretty cynical about office life and it's a reason for the popularity of these.  Also check out the Q&A with Adams, which is part of the product page.

SIZE: Each of these books is about 90 MB, which is 90 times larger than the average novel.  In other words, each will take the space that about 90 novels would on the Kindle Fire storage space.
  I always have a Wi-Drive in my purse so I can just read them from there wirelessly at anytime, but if you don't use a solution like that, watch the storage space you have left.  A Wi-Drive unit is smaller than a cell-phone and can hold from 16-64 GB of files to be streamed and shared on several devices at the same time.

A "BEST E-BOOK READERS" LISTING STARTS WITH KINDLE FIRE
I was startled to see, in an e-reader comparison at Tech Goes Strong, the Kindle Fire listed in the top spot as an eBook reader since it's a hybrid tablet/reader and the Kindle line does have topnotch dedicated eInk readers.  However, I do sometimes take the KFire out instead of the KTouch, but if I'm worried about battery life that day, then I take the eInk reader, and of course book-reading on this is easier on the eyes but the Kindle Fire is surprisingly comfortable unless you're in direct sunlight.

The KFire is followed on this listing by the iPad 3, B&N's Nook Glowlight, the Sony Reader, and the Kobo one. These are actually summary comparisons.

AMAZON GRANTED DIGITAL GIFT PATENT
VR-Zone points out that there's a "twist to the patent," which would otherwise be silly, in that in addition to selecting a digital gift, sending a notification to the recipient, and having the recipient download the gift, "it also describes the ability for the gift-giver to DELAY PAYMENT for the item until the digital gift has been accepted.  If the gift hasn’t been accepted and downloaded by a specific time, the order can be cancelled and no payment will be made by the gift-giver."

 Amazon applied for the patent in 2008, so it's taken about 4 years.  Now let's see them actually implement the delayed-payment feature.

BORROWING EBOOKS FROM THE LIBRARY
This how-to by Clayton Morris for FoxNews was of interest to me in a couple of ways.  First, the header shows the first generation Nook from a couple of years ago, and second, it describes clearly how simple it is for Kindlers to borrow a book from a public library while detailing the steps necessary for the "bit more cumbersome" process used with the Nook.  It'll be useful for Nook owners new to the procedure though.

A NOOK EDITION OF TOLSTOY'S WAR AND PEACE CONVERTS "KINDLED" to "NOOKD"
VentureBeat's Sean Ludwig references the original blog that discovered this special conversion that applied the changes of the dreaded "Kindle" word to "Nook" throughout the classic, producing sentences like, "It was as if a light had been Nookd in a carved and painted lantern…."   :-)

  (This could have been a very early anticipation of the GlowLight.)

  While some had wondered if B&N would go so far, it's almost surely caused by the publisher, ironically named "Superior Formatting Publishing" doing a Search and Replace when converting a Kindle book (created first) to the Nook platform and wanting to remove any Amazon Kindle references.

UK REVIEW OF KINDLE TOUCH NOW FINALLY AVAILABLE THERE
V3.co.uk's Madeline Bennett reviews it.  The long recharge time is caused by recharging it via USB connection to a computer, which takes much longer than using a power adapter.  A new Kindle with many new books being added to it will also use more battery power at first because each book is indexed for later keyword searches.

HAY BOOKSELLER'S CAMPAIGN TO DRIVE KINDLES OUT OF TOWN
This was just funny, though I can appreciate the worry.  The Guardian has fun with the story about Derek Addyman's remarks to the Daily Mail (which has many colorful photos) about the new gadgets that "have no soul."  He further explains, "Booksellers here definitely want them banned. You see people walking around with Kindles and they are like robots in another world.

‘Books are sociable and people stop and talk to each other about them.  Kindles are just a phase and they won’t last. They are our enemy."




Current Kindle Models for reference, plus free-ebook search links
US:
Kindle Fire  7" tablet - $199
Kindle NoTouch ("Kindle") - $79/$109
Kindle Touch, WiFi
- $99/$139
Kindle Touch, 3G/WiFi - $149/$189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189, Free, slow web
Kindle DX - $379, Free, slow web
UK:
Kindle Basic, NoTouch - £89
Kindle Touch WiFi, UK - £109
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi, UK - £169
Kindle Keyboard 3G, UK - £149
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB
OTHER International
Kindle NoTouch Basic - $109
Kindle Touch WiFi - $139
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi - $189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB

Check often: Temporarily-free recently published Kindle books
  Guide to finding Free Kindle books and Sources.  Top 100 free bestsellers.  Liked-books under $1
UK-Only: recently published free books, bestsellers, or £5 Max ones
    Also, UK customers should see the UK store's Top 100 free bestsellers.

  *Click* to Return to the HOME PAGE.  Or click on the web browser's BACK button Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Kindle news: YouSendIt, Inc. announces custom app built for Kindle Fire - Update

YouSendIt app for Kindle Fire released today

Broadcast Newsroom brings a press release from YouSendIt about their new "BYOD" (Bring Your Own Device to the workplace) app released today with "three new productivity features" making it "even easier to access content and collaborate on the go"

Mihir Nanavati, VP of product management for YouSendIt says, "... users can view files, sign documents and share files and folders from Kindle Fire..."

Clicking on either image takes you to the Amazon Android Appstore page for the product.  "When users download the app from Amazon [it's free at this point]  and sign up within 30 days of today, YouSendIt will give them unlimited e-signatures on their Kindle Fire for the lifetime of their YouSendIt account.

"Users can quickly sign any document and securely send it -- without having to print, scan, fax or ship it."

  YouSendIt also added new features to its Android smartphone application available in other Android marketplaces.

Advantages noted:
  • Add files from a memory card/local folder -- NEW
  • Open files from the YouSendIt app in other apps and edit them -- NEW
  • Quickly act on files via new action bar -- NEW
  • Move files from other applications to YouSendIt
  • Securely send a file, share a folder, sign a file and preview files
  • Manage folder permissions such as adding and removing users from shared folders

I'd say that the decision to try this one is a no-brainer.  If fees attached at a later date are unwelcome, the app can be deleted.

(Update: In addition, they offer for businesses needing to comply with BYOD policies, Workstream by YouSendIt, which includes procedures for "including application-level passcode protection, remote wipe and blacklist/whitelisting for sharing content. In addition, Workstream encrypts data on the device, in transit and at rest.")




US:
Kindle Fire  7" tablet - $199
Kindle NoTouch ("Kindle") - $79/$109
Kindle Touch, WiFi
- $99/$139
Kindle Touch, 3G/WiFi - $149/$189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189, Free, slow web
Kindle DX - $379, Free, slow web
UK:
Kindle Basic, NoTouch - £89
Kindle Touch WiFi, UK - £109
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi, UK - £169
Kindle Keyboard 3G, UK - £149
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB
OTHER International
Kindle NoTouch Basic - $109
Kindle Touch WiFi - $139
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi - $189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB

  For daily free ebooks, check the following links:
Temporarily-free books - Non-classics
USA: by:
   Publication Date  
   Bestselling   High-ratings

UK: PubDate   Popular
The Kindle Daily Deal
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 Keyboard(U.S. only, currently):
  99c Notepad 1.1,   99c Calculator,
  99c Calendar,   99c Converter


  *Click* to Return to the HOME PAGE.  Or click on the web browser's BACK button Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

Kindle news after vacation's end: E-readers trigger a boom in reading; Kindle Fire Sales-another look; Target; Lovefilm and NBCUniversal

VACATION'S END
My vacationing at Yosemite is ended for this year, but with a bang in a way, in that after a week of totally sunny weather, we had sudden thunderstorms throughout day 5, with snow and hail in the higher areas -- at the end of May.

  I spent about 6 hours that afternoon, along with many others, trying to catch the shifting light during the 'clearings' between the storms, and it was a pretty wet time, at near-freezing temperatures at about 4,400 ft, and very odd to drive a bit higher above Tunnel View (the lower viewpoint shown here), to find the trees at the junction of Highway 41 and Glacier Point Road almost wholly white with instant snow as we approach summer.
  Small pieces of hail stayed on my windshield for a bit even in the area of the valley's stables earlier, where the mule and horseback rides were being cancelled.

  Below that blanket of green in the image above is Yosemite Valley, where we lodge and play.
  During the week, it's often explained to us in several ways how, long ago, glaciers carved out that space, specifically Yosemite Glacier.

  I haven't gone through the snow photos yet, but did put a set of about six shots of Tunnel View's scenic changes during the latter part of that day (ending about 7:30pm in these scenes).  There are also a couple of shots from Glacier Point (3,214 feet above the valley) of an area with the somewhat lesser-known Vernal and Nevada Falls, taken on the first day I was there.
  If pbase is having photo-display problems, you can use the google-plus album instead.

So, now I'll settle back into more regular blogging while the rest of the world goes on longer vacations.

Are people reading less? Or more?
The Royal Gazetteonline's Marcia Breen reports today that Pew Research Center's most recent research finds that about one in five adults in the US owns an e-reader as of January 2012, "up from one in ten in mid-December of last year" and "it looks like that boom in e-readers has triggered a boom in reading."
' According to the research, the average e-book reader reads 60 percent more than a traditional book reader. Owners of a Kindle, Nook or iPad read an average of 24 books a year compared to the non-e-book readers who read an average of 15 books a year.

The study also found 42 percent of those who read digital content say they now spend more time reading than they did before, whether it’s in bed or on the go and that women are reading more than men. '

Reasons given for moving to e-readers: easy access while traveling and commuting; font size adjustments, built-in dictionary, a library in the palm of your hand.  Even now, the study found, "88 percent of people" in that study who had read an e-book in the past year had also read a printed book during that time.  Read more on that here

Did Kindle Fire Sales really fade that much in 1st quarter 2012?
PCWorld's Jeff Berolucci points to a column by Stephen Baker for the NPD Group, "Shipments are Not Sales," in which he "pulls no punches in chastising tech bloggers for misinterpreting new data from research firm IDC.  Baker points out:
' Of course, sales always rise dramatically in the fourth quarter of the year--also known as the holiday shopping season--and Amazon understandably shipped millions of Kindle Fires to its warehouses and retail partners to meet demand. All of those 4.8 million Fires shipped didn't sell, naturally, which meant plenty of inventory was left over for early 2012. This resulted in lower (OK, significantly lower) Kindle Fire shipments in that quarter.

So how did the Kindle Fire do in the first quarter of 2012? Pretty darn well, thank you very much. According to NPD's Consumer Tracking Service, the Kindle actually sold (there is that word again, this time properly used) 1.8 million units in the first quarter. That is, "an actual consumer bought it and took it home (or had it delivered) and paid their own real money," Baker writes. '
  See Baker's post for much more detail.

I remember when ace commenter jftorres wrote this uncommon sense to Nate Hoffelder's The-Digital-Reader at about the same time, when IDG Research was also focusing on the drop in Kindle Fire shipments in the first qtr after the Holidays:
' ... Not unusual with seasonal products to see a big spike during the holidays followed by much lower sales during the year.
Gaming consoles are a perfect example:
MS has sold 67 million XBOX 360s worldwide (I just saw the number this morning) since 2005.
Last XMAS they sold about 4 million of those in the US over three months, whereas last month they sold about 400,000.
And those are good numbers.
700K FIREs in a month may not be in iPad territory but they still point at 10 million-plus for the year, which is what has been predicted for FIRE. '

Target's Kindle news
In the meantime, the recent story of Target dropping Kindles, indicating the reason is that Amazon is an aggressive retail competitor, coincided with their announcement that 25 of its main stores will add new iPad departments.

Amazon's LOVEFiLM (European)
LOVEFiLM announced today a "multi-year digital license agreement with NBCUniversal International Television Distribution, providing LOVEFiLM members exclusive streaming access to titles from Universal Pictures during the second pay window."
  My question: Why the serial-killer style capitalization-mix in a company name?  It reminds me of the tortured enTourage eDGe, which is no longer with us, possibly partially due to people not wanting to even type that name.

  The European streaming video company has previously announced exclusive content deals with Disney, Sony, Warner Bros. and STUDIOCANAL. [Now we have all caps.]
  See the press release for the several films included.

  The Telegraph's Emma Barnett explains that the "second pay window" means "around six months after [a film] has been released to Sky Movies (which has a lock on most pay-TV movie rights) after the cinema run has finished" and she adds that this deal is "a coup for Lovefilm" (she ignores the capitalization) as it goes head to head with Netflix...which launched its on-demand movie subscription service in the UK at the start of this year."

  Engadget's James Trew thinks it "looks Kick Ass."
  TechCrunch's Sarah Perez describes the wide variety of devices supported, "including PCs, Macs, the iPad, internet-connected TVs and Blu-ray players, as well as game consoles like the Xbox 360 and Sony PlayStation. There are 175 devices, in total, which are supported."




Current Kindle Models for reference, plus free-ebook search links
US:
Kindle Fire  7" tablet - $199
Kindle NoTouch ("Kindle") - $79/$109
Kindle Touch, WiFi
- $99/$139
Kindle Touch, 3G/WiFi - $149/$189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189, Free, slow web
Kindle DX - $379, Free, slow web
UK:
Kindle Basic, NoTouch - £89
Kindle Touch WiFi, UK - £109
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi, UK - £169
Kindle Keyboard 3G, UK - £149
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB
OTHER International
Kindle NoTouch Basic - $109
Kindle Touch WiFi - $139
Kindle Touch 3G/WiFi - $189
Kindle Keybd 3G - $189
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB

Check often: Temporarily-free recently published Kindle books
  Guide to finding Free Kindle books and Sources.  Top 100 free bestsellers.  Liked-books under $1
UK-Only: recently published free books, bestsellers, or £5 Max ones
    Also, UK customers should see the UK store's Top 100 free bestsellers.

  *Click* to Return to the HOME PAGE.  Or click on the web browser's BACK button Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Amazon finally gets tough on junk titles. IPG e-books are back (5,000 of them))

The Bookseller reports the welcome news (for many) that:
' In a note posted on its Kindle Direct Publishing forum, Amazon said it that it would no longer "accept content that is freely available on the web unless you are the copyright owner of that content".

Amazon said it would continue to accept public domain content, but said it may not allow it to be sold if "its content is undifferentiated or barely differentiated from one or more other books." '

See the article for what the ramifications may be. Kindle-Edition subscribers can use Menu/Article Mode after they click through to the story, to read it more easily.

Am still on vacation but sending along news items if they might be interesting.

ALSO, paidContent's Laura Hazard Owens reports that IPG and Amazon have finally made an agreement to bring back 5,000+ books at whatever terms are bearable for both parties.  No one seems to know what those terms are. But paidContent has printed IPG's statement to their authors, and they are not charging authors whatever working fees for the affected period.


That's it for now. Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Kindle News: Waterstone, soft rumors, Paramount movies to Prime

Kindle News: Bits and pieces - I'm on vacation this week and the news is mostly very soft rumors, most of them conflicting so until they firm up I don't tend to report them, but a bit on that further on down.

Waterstones in the UK has signed an agreement with Amazon to sell Kindles in the UK, although Waterstones had been said to be in talks with Barnes and Noble for international sales.  However, managing director James Daunt said in a statement. “The best digital readers, the Kindle family, will be married to the singular pleasures of browsing a curated bookshop. With the combination of “We asked ourselves, ‘what do our customers want?’; the answer was the Kindle. Once we’d done that this was self-evidently the best deal,” Daunt told The Bookseller...
...
paidContent's article by Laura Hazard Owen ends with what what looks like a quote from The Bookseller:
"Daunt said the two businesses had started talking only ‘relatively recently,’ admitting that he had looked at other options but rejected them. ‘Ultimately, when we thought about it, we had to give the customers what they wanted. And the best device on the market is the Kindle.’ "

They have about 300 stores, so it is a real plus for Amazon and of course bad news for Barnes and Noble.

Rumors
The Kindle Fire rumor a couple of weeks ago was that they were working on an 8.9" tablet to be ready for the holidays, end of 2012 but that while some orders were underaway, there were no named companies as there were when rumors were stronger in the past.

Now it's a 10" model, others say but with no basis for the rumors. I think it's a slow newscycle and these articles invariably end with "What do you think will happen?"

We'll see.

Hundreds of Paramount movies being added to Prime
See TechCrunch for details.

More later... Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
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Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

Monday, May 21, 2012

Today's Kindle Daily Deal - one for dog lovers

A SMALL FURRY PRAYER - Today's Kindle Daily Deal

Just a quick note to alert dog lovers to Amazon's more unusual Kindle Daily Deal today, which is Steven Kotler's A Small Furry Prayer, which has 71 customer reviews and an average rating of 4.5 stars.

The Daily Deal blurb: "At 40, journalist Steven Kotler fell in love with Lila, a devoted animal rescuer. This investigative, philosophical, and fun-filled narrative follows the couple's move to New Mexico to create a dog sanctuary.  It's an insider's look at one of the largest and least underground movements in America: dog rescue."

Sunday's price: $9.50, Monday's discount $7.60, Monday's Daily Deal Price: $1.99 (79% off)

There are editorial reviews from Booklist and an unnamed one that references Kirsus Reviews: "'A delightful, rich read sure to take you to unexpected places and beyond' Bark," in addition to the customer reviews.




For daily free ebooks, check the following links:
Temporarily-free books - Non-classics
USA: by:
   Publication Date  
   Bestselling   High-ratings

UK: PubDate   Popular
The Kindle Daily Deal
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 Keyboard(U.S. only, currently):
  99c Notepad 1.1,   99c Calculator,
  99c Calendar,   99c Converter


  *Click* to Return to the HOME PAGE.  Or click on the web browser's BACK button Below are ways to Share this post if you'd like others to see it.
-- The Send to Kindle button works well only on Firefox currently.

Send to Kindle


(Older posts have older Kindle model info. For latest models, see CURRENT KINDLES page. )
If interested, you can also follow my add'l blog-related news at Facebook and Twitter
Questions & feedback are welcome in the Comment areas (tho' spam is deleted). Thanks!

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Kindle News: 17 more states join class action suit. Excellent timeline and guide to points in DOJ and Class Action lawsuits

17 more states join class action against Big5 and Apple, with new details revealed.

paidContent's Laura Hazard Owen reports that New York, Washington D.C., and 15 other states "have joined the e-book pricing class action suit against Apple, Macmillan and Penguin, bringing the total number of states involved so far to 31 (if you include DC and Puerto Rico). "

Owens' piece is a more in-depth look than we've seen with other news-site reports,
She adds that, unlike the Department of Justice (DOJ), the states seek monetary restitution for consumers and have already reached, as we've seen earlier, a settlement with Hachette, Simon & Schuster and HarperCollins.

With that amended complaint comes new information that's been made public, though it's not clear why it was redacted from the version filed in April.  Much of that newly-public information (in the state's amended complaint) is found in the DOJ filing against Apple and the publishers, but new details include an e-mail from Steve Jobs that shows him becoming directly involved in the agency pricing negotiations "after [Apple's] Eddy Cue could not secure one of the Conspiring Publisher’s commitment directly from an executive."

We see yet another admission or confirmation that the publishers (and therefore presumably their authors) did make more money under the older, wholesale model despite many arguments made in forums by authors (who were asked by their publishers to join forum discussions) that the authors' revenue would be less under Amazon's traditional wholesaler arrangement.
' Macmillan CEO John Sargent attempted to negotiate with Apple’s Eddy Cue on a way to make agency pricing less painful for publishers (publishers actually make more money under the wholesale model, where they are paid based on a book’s retail list price, than from the agency model).

Asking Apple to help, then, by taking a reduced cut
On January 11, 2010, Sargent wrote to Apple in an e-mail, "Am thinking a possible way to ease the financial pain for the publishers and authors of moving to the agency model.  Could you take a reduced cut on hardcover first releases (where we are presently making 14.00 in revenue and would make 9.00 under your assumptions)?"
  Apple did not agree to take less than its customary 30 percent cut. '

Now, "hardcover" is mentioned there, but e-book 'suggested retail prices' were set by publishers under the traditional agreements (often set, in 2009, at $26), and Amazon, it's been explained often, usually paid about 50% of that publisher-set retail price to the publisher, EVEN when Amazon sold a bestseller e-book at $9.99, a price that made the Big5 nervous about the devaluing of their hardcover books.

  Many authors did actually believe that they'd make less when an e-book was discounted by Amazon, and I think the publishers let many of them believe and say this in forums.  There was a lot of rancor in the forums between some authors and customers as a result.

Publisher e-mail
Then a publisher, Owens points out, emailed the parent company's CEO Jan. 21, 2010 that
' [Apple's Eddy Cue] … was eloquent on why they would be a great partner, that price could and would be experimented with as Apple want [sic] to drive high revenues; that this would be for a one year term; that one major publisher (clearly RH) was out and that ne [sic] need the five majors in but maybe four. He said that he was sure he would close on two today and two tomorrow... '

Steve Jobs's e-mail
Jobs stepped in and wrote to a resistant executive at one of the "Conspiring Publishers," outlining the choices the publisher had, the only semi-attractive one being
' Throw in with Apple and see if we can all make a go of this to create a real mainstream ebooks market at $12.99 and $14.99. '

As we saw, the Big5 e-books actually came to sell between $12.99 and $19.99.

E-mails to Barnes & Noble - who became quite active in all this
After the Big5 and Apple agreed on the Agency model and pricing, the amended class action complaint, Owens explains (bold-facing mine):
'...says the five publishers “worked together to force” Random House to adopt it as well.

  On March 4, 2010, in an exchange also identified in the DOJ’s filing, Penguin CEO David Shanks sent Barnes & Noble’s then-CEO Steve Riggio an e-mail reading in part,
  “Random House has chosen to stay on their current model and will allow retailers to sell at whatever price they wish…I would hope that [Barnes & Noble] would be equally brutal to Publishers who have thrown in with your competition with obvious disdain for your welfare…I hope you make Random House hurt like Amazon is doing to people who are looking out for the overall welfare of the publishing industry.” '
While this is one CEO (of one of the two publishing companies that have not settled) writing to Barnes and Noble, it's an indication of an atmosphere of concern stated often (within the complaint) that the "conspiring publishers" needed more publishers to stay together on all this to get Amazon to agree to the Agency model and its higher, non-competitive pricing.

B&N's management did decide not to feature Random House in any future advertising, the complaint says.  And most who follow this pricing war know that Apple refused Random House books a place in their iBookStore.  Random House is said to be the largest U.S publisher of novels.  Neither Apple nor B&N are "Gas 'N' Groceries on Route 19" stores taking defensive measures against giant Amazon.  But that latter is Authors Guild President Scott Turow's most recent fantasy.  I feel bad for the authors who are represented by this guy whose forte seems to be a mixture of fantasy and bad melodrama, when he refers to Amazon as the 'Darth Vader of publishing.'

And, as I said in late April, Turow even refers to Apple as "a minor player in the realm of books" (the minor road-store that could, in one day, successfully encourage a jacking-up of e-book prices an average 50% (to $20 at the high-end), nation-wide, on new books, and even deny Random House space for its e-books because RH would not cooperate on the Agency model.  Yep, Apple's just a small store hoping to get its size 3 foot in the publishing door.

The Club
When discussing what I'd deem normal book business practices of 'windowing' or staggering different releases of a book, if not done in lock-step, the publishers "referenced themselves in one email as ‘the Club!’"  That was in connection with windowing discussions, and, as Owen says, not agency pricing discussions with Apple.  But a club seldom calls itself that over one small facet of whatever brings them together as co-members, but the label does tend to speak to group focus of some type, in this case having to do with e-book pricing.

Downloads linked at the paidContent story:
The states’ amended complaint (5/11/12)
The states’ original complaint (4/11/12)
The Department of Justice’s complaint (4/11/12)

I've left out a lot of detail and a table of how Apple calculated its e-book prices in publisher contracts, but you can read the full details at paidContent's story.


ALSO: EXCELLENT "DOJ LAWSUIT UPDATE" by "Dear Author"

MANY interesting points are made in this piece that explains what is happening here, Mr. Jones, step-by step.  Fascinating read, because I remember hearing about all this as it was happening and then it all tended to fade and blend together, but she [Jane] lays it all out, in no-nonsense manner.
  I'll just quote the opening paragraph from her huge list of info-points with explanations of what some of the actions described indicate.
'  Collectively the Big 6 account for approximately 60% of all revenue generated from print titles sold in the U.S. and 85% of all revenue generated from the sale of NYT Bestsellers.
  In 2009, the publishers’ market share broke down as follows:  Random House (17.5%), Penguin (11.3%), Hachette (10%), HarperCollins (9.8%), Simon & Schuster (9.1%), and  Macmillan (5.4%) '

So, if you're interested in what is essentially a detective story with all the pieces starting to come together, go to Dear Author for the step-by-step guide.


Earlier and related:
TIMELINE:  Ebook Pricing Wars - what DOJ would have seen.




Current Kindle Models for reference, plus free-ebook search links (non-Big5)
US:
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Kindle NoTouch ("Kindle") - $79/$109
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- $99/$139
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Kindle DX - $379, Free, slow web
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Kindle Keyboard 3G, UK - £149
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB
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Kindle Keybd 3G - $189
  Keybd: w/ Free, slow 3G WEB

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    Also, UK customers should see the UK store's Top 100 free bestsellers.

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