Mobile Tech

Can Jumbo Kindle Save Students’ Backs – and the Newspaper Industry’s Neck?

Amazon on Wednesday unveiled the new Kindle DX, a larger version of its Kindle e-reader, during a press conference at Pace University.

Amazon heads were accompanied at the event by executives from the device’s two major target markets — the newspaper and publishing industries.

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Newspapers and at least one university will be testing the distribution of content through the Kindle DX this fall.

Priced at US$489, the Kindle DX will be released this summer; Amazon is taking preorders now.

Basic Details

The Kindle DX’s screen measures 9.7 inches diagonally, compared with the 6-inch screen of its immediate predecessor, the Kindle 2.

In addition to being physically larger, the Kindle DX can store about 3,500 books, compared with the Kindle 2’s 1,500.

The Kindle DX also has a native PDF reader, whereas the Kindle 2 offers PDF support through a file conversion process.

At $489, the DX costs $130 more than the Kindle 2, which is offered at $359.

The DX’s other capabilities are very similar to those of the Kindle 2, according to Amazon.

The Technical Stuff

The Kindle DX weighs almost 19 ounces and has 4 GB of storage, about 3.3 GB of which are available to store book content.

Its battery lasts up to four days with the wireless capability turned on, Amazon claims. It recharges fully in about four hours, and can be charged through a computer’s USB 2.0 port.

The Kindle DX supports the PDF, TXT, Kindle, Audible, MP3, and unprotected mobi formats natively. It also supports the HTML, DOC, RTF, JPEG, GIF, PNG and BMP formats through file conversion.

Mobi, or “dotMobi,” is a domain for mobile device use that is sponsored by several vendors including Microsoft, Nokia and Vodafone.

The Kindle DX comes with a power adapter, a USB 2.0 cable and a battery. A Quick Start guide is included in the box, and the Kindle DX User’s Guide comes preinstalled as a PDF file. The device comes with a one-year limited warranty and service. A two-year extended warranty is sold separately for $109.

Textbooks or Newspapers?

As they flail about seeking ways to stay afloat, newspaper publishers are looking to e-readers like the Kindle as a possible key to sustained buoyancy. However, the Kindle DX will likely be marketed first to schools and universities, according to Gartner analyst Andrew Frank.

“The textbook announcements came first at the press conference and seemed less speculative in terms of having to imagine how people would interact with this technology in the future,” he told TechNewsWorld.

“Even though the potential value of e-readers to newspaper publishers is compelling, it’s still an unproven story, and there are lots of usability questions that pop up,” he said.

For the Student

Amazon has reached agreements with three textbook publishers — Pearson, Cengage Learning and Wiley — said Amazon Chairman Jeff Bezos. Together, they represent 60 percent of the market.

Students at five universities will try out the device this fall, Bezos said. These institutions are Case Western Reserve University; Arizona State University; Princeton University; the University of Virginia; and Pace University.

The Kindle DX might just catch on in schools and universities, Yankee Group analyst Josh Martin said. “If they can convince schools this is a good investment over five to 10 years, it may make a difference,” he told TechNewsWorld. “Textbooks are a static technology that needs to change.”

Scholarly Caveats

However, economic factors may hinder the adoption of the Kindle DX among students. The pricing of the content will make a difference.

“If you’re talking about a $200 textbook being available on the Kindle at $180, the value proposition isn’t there,” Martin said. “Also, right now, students can resell their old textbooks. Can they do that with downloaded textbooks in PDF format?”

Martin also thinks that at nearly $500, the Kindle DX is too expensive. “With budgets being what they are, this is an interesting time to release the device,” he said.

Other Possible Problems in School

If the Kindle DX is used in education, licensing and other issues may also crop up.

“Does the school license the right to a book? If so, for how long?” Martin asked. “What happens if a student transfers to another school? There are a lot of cogs that need to be aligned.”

Other issues include screen resolution quality, the problem of a Kindle’s battery dying while its owner is in class, and whether or not color is important.

Kindles are gray-scale devices, but many textbooks have color charts, graphics and photographs.

The Newspaper Industry

Three newspapers will offer the Kindle DX at a reduced price in exchange for long-term subscriptions — The New York Times, the Boston Globe and the Washington Post.

All three are facing financial problems, and there was speculation last month that The New York Times, which owns the Boston Globe, could declare the Boston paper bankrupt. The Times itself reportedly has to come up with $400 million for payments to lenders this month.

However, trials with the Kindle DX would have to be carefully managed. “The New York Times said these trials would be offered to readers outside the zones where delivery was available, so clearly there are issues with cannibalization of sales,” Gartner’s Frank said.

“That could delay adoption of the technology by newspaper publishers,” he added.

1 Comment

  • Not there yet…

    Seriously, the price is a "huge" problem. But, that isn’t the only one. 4GB may "theoretically" store X number of books, but not if any of them contain anything like images, especially high quality ones. Some newspapers might have a gig of images just for one issue, and with such a limited capacity, you can’t "save" old issues, especially since its not designed, from what I AM seeing, to allow someone to plug it into a printer, like you would a camera, and make a hard copy (you could possibly limit how many such copies a single device would be "allowed" to print, but more than one, in case something goes wrong, like the printer not working right.)

    What is needed for this to "truly" take off is far more ubiquitous wireless internet, or common place kiosks you can go to, in order to "get" the latest magazine/paper, enough capacity to make it possible to store some of it for a while, some way to make hard copies, if needed, and there are times that "will" still be needed, at minimum. I can see at some point a student being able to easily add "references", or quote from, texts, books, papers, magazines, etc. (gods how I wish I could have done that back in Highschool), while "writing" their paper on the thing too, at some point.

    But, in the short term, you need to be able to "get" the data to the thing, subscribe for sane AM ounts to your favorite publication, actually be able to "use" that content in a halfway sane fashion, and do it one something that doesn’t cost the same as a fracking low end laptop. Note that a newspaper might be able, with more "direct" ways to talk to their system, charge, or add a pending charge (to be updated when next you connect) for any prints you do make, so they still make money similar to what they do "now" for printed copies. Say.. Read certain sections, like the comics, more or less free, and see some headlines, pay a "small" subscription (or just one time purchase) for all the content, then 2-3 cents per page for any you hard copy. It would be fair, affordable, and since you could "get" a paper from any damn place on the bloody planet, like you "used to be able to" not long ago, when even small towns might have carried 4-5 of them, besides the local one, instead of "just" the local one, or maybe, if your lucky, Wall Street Journal.

    But, and here is the key issue, beyond having the gadget. If/when you get the price where its sane, you need an internet service *in place*, or software that could be run as such a service, that gives the "local" people the ability to publish their "layout" and content to a system that can both provide the printed final (for those that still do that) or a downloadable copy, at the prices they set, so that "anyone" with a computer and the right software (initially), and later on, when things like the Kindle become viable, the means to get them on "that" too. And, you need something like a torrent’s tracker to register publications to, so people can "find" the content. In other words, we have here an overpriced gadget, which is sort of nice, but its like if someone had written Bittorrent before they invented TCP/IP. Fine and lovely idea, but worthless if you don’t have the "systems" in place to make it work **first**. Systems that, at the moment, make a lot more sense to build for the hundreds of millions of PC/MAC/Linux users already out there, than "after the fact", for the Kindle.

    Mind, people built cars before they figured out that "roads" where a useful thing to have too, but.. you would think we would know better by now. lol

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