Report: Bigger Amazon Kindle May Debut This Week
A report from The New York Times claims Amazon may release a larger-screened version of its e-reader, the Kindle. The article arrives as newspaper companies face plunging
As news of the potential shuttering of the Boston Globe within 60
days rattles the newspaper industry, The New York Times (which owns the
Globe) reports
a larger-screen version of Amazon's Kindle e-reader, formatted for
larger print publications like newspapers or magazines, may be on the
market as early as this week.
The Times report suggests the device would be of great interest to
print media publications, including The Times, although Amazon and New
York Times refused to comment for the article. "These devices from
Amazon and other manufacturers offer an almost irresistible proposition
to newspaper and magazine industries," wrote Times reporter Brad Stone.
"They would allow publishers to save millions on the cost of printing
and distributing their publications, at precisely a time when their
businesses are under historic levels of pressure."
In March, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and the Rocky Mountain News
announced they would no longer publish articles in print, and
newspapers across the country-and around the world-are experiencing
mounting losses in their print divisions. The Times reported a 27
percent plunge in advertising revenue in April, with revenue for the Q1
2009 period dropping 19 percent to $609 million.
John Ridding, the chief executive British newspaper The Financial
Times, told The Times moving to larger screen e-reading devices is
something they are seriously considering. "The severe double whammy of
the recession and the structural shift to the Internet has created an
urgency that has rightly focused attention on these devices."
The $359 Kindle2, Amazon's latest version of its e-book reader, uses an
electronic paper display and downloads content over Amazon's Whispernet
network. In March, the company launched an application, Kindle for iPhone, which allows owners of the smartphone to access Kindle content on their phones.
Amazon is not the only player in the e-reading market, however. Plastic
Logic, headquartered in Cambridge, United Kingdom, announced its
device, simply called the Reader, will come to market in two-phased
entry that will begin in the second half of 2009 with pilots and trials
with key partners. Plastic Logic said they expect to accelerate
the momentum of sales in 2010. The Sony Reader, which uses an
electronic paper display developed by Cambridge, Mass.-based E Ink
Corporation, offers a six-inch screen and uses similar wireless
downloading technology.
The increased competition that could challenge Amazon's dominance of
the e-reader market has resulted in Amazon reaching out to newspapers
and solidifying its grip on popular devices like Apple's iPhone; in
late April Amazon acquired the startup called Lexcycle, which had
developed an application named Stanza that allowed Apple iPhone and
iPod touch owners to use the devices like an electronic book reader.









