Monday, November 19, 2007

Amazon's New Wireless Reading Device "Kindle"

Kindle: Amazon's New Wireless Reading Device - Today Amazon.com released Kindle, what some are of course calling the iPod for eBooks.

Engadget has some good coverage of the release and some initial reactions to the device. Initial reactions to the hardware design seem favorable, and in the 'ugly, but pleasingly functional' category.

Here are some things that seem to stand out immediately...

PROS
  • Amazon and books are peas in a pod, the user experience seems carefully crafter to lead to smooth downloading and reading workflow
  • The form factor is interesting, the screen similar in size to a book and the e-ink technology looks like it offers a grayscale rendering, and it's light
  • The eBooks are less expensive is some cases, than buying and shipping the paper counterpart - there's a definite "Green" notion to this.
  • The battery is user-replaceable (cough - Apple, get a clue)
  • No subscriptions or additional fees, beyond the cost of the device, for wireless access, 1yr warranty
  • Promised less than 1 min. downloads
  • USB 2.0 connectivity for PC and Mac, but does not require a computer
  • Email documents and images to the device, read blogs and newspapers
CONS
  • $400 and a Grayscale display? Now that's more Newton than the iPhone. I understand the tradeoffs here, but we are in the age of sexy color touchscreen mobile devices, so this does come across as a bit v1.0
  • No back-light, so, how do you read in the dark? Well, one of the few accessories listed at the bottom of the new Kindle product page is a clunky looking $20 reading light with a clip designed more for print books than eBooks. This seems like a careless afterthought, so it's probably safe to assume that Amazon will release or partner for slicker accessories to fill in the feature gaps.
  • As clipmarks.com points out, unlike an iPod you can't "rip" the books you already own onto the Kindle. So, it seems to me, since Amazon keeps such great tabs on previous purchases, it would be slick if they offered customers free versions of books previously purchased on Amazon as Kindle eBook 'cross-grades'.
  • The built in 256MB internal is pretty wimpy. If you really intend to fill it up with books and emailed documents, you'll likely make the additional investment in a SD memory card (supports up to 4GB). So mark that down as a hidden cost.
  • $9.99+ per book may not be a great savings when you factor in the purchase of the Kindle device itself. These eBooks cannot be shared easily, resold in the aftermarket, or donated to a local library. Seth Godin has an interesting perspective on this. In this sense, Kindle books are far more limited - but that same argument has not deterred online music sales and overpricing.
  • I can't seem to find info on the exact dimensions of the screen itself, I'm curious to know just how much bigger it is than an iPod touch / iPhone
  • All that embossed texture on the backside is going to collect some nasty dirt and buildup from your grubby hands.
  • Branding nit: with "Book Burning" as an indelible part of history, Kindle certainly seems loaded with irony
  • And as an aside, the Kindle introduces techno-lust into the reading equation. Next year's Kindle will be cooler, just like iPods, let the buyers remorse begin. Books don't really do that to you.
While others have tried, Amazon is in a unique position to move this technology forward. It will be interesting to see how the product performs, and to observe the ecosystem that will likely grow around it.

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Thursday, July 12, 2007

rss2twitter.com - Dead simple solution for adding a feed to twitter

rss2twitter.com: "With RSS 2 Twitter any RSS feed can now be twittered. Want to subscribe to any blog and have it go to your phone? Easy - Just setup a twitter account, log in here with that username and password and then add some feeds and that account will twitter away to the tune of your feed."

Just login with your twitter account, add your RSS feeds, and there you go.

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Feedburner Comes to Blogger: Google Analytics Next?


mashable.com: "It was inevitable really: Feedburner’s new owner Google has gone ahead and integrated the feed tracking service into its Blogspot/Blogger.com blog platform, enabling one click redirection of Blogger feeds to Feedburner.

In other words: if you want detailed stats on who is reading your Blogger blog, it’s now easy to do. The integration also works with blogger blogs not hosted on the Blogspot domain. Feedburner’s instructions: “log into your Blogger account, select Settings | Site Feed, enter your FeedBurner feed address and click “Save Settings.”"

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Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Streamy - The Digg Killer?

via digg: "Streamy is one part Pageflakes + one part Digg. Users get their home page which is divided into topical sections but then via the wisdom of the Streamy crowds you get personalized recommendations on other stories and publications." Go to the site to request an invite to the BETA, or check out the video overview below.


read more | digg story

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Friday, March 09, 2007

MySpace News: The Digg Killer?

"MySpace is launching a news aggregator called MySpace News in the second quarter of 2007. It’ll rely on both algorithms and user rating - basically a combination of Google News and Digg..."

Yeah maybe it will be like the parallel-universe kind of digg with a really ugly design, giant ads with scantily clad women, and constant intermittent outages! I know, I know, it will probably succeed due to the sheer volume of existing users... Add to the '_-killer?' watchlist :-P

read more | digg story

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Thursday, November 09, 2006

Squidoo or Squidon't...



So it's been around for a while, and it has been pretty much bodyslammed. But I wanted to expeirence the UI, it's OK but clumbsy overall. Here's a resulting page: http://www.squidoo.com/jydesign/. In the end, it's too proprietary to replace one's blog. However, I intend to use it as another page out there that promotes what I'm up to. It's pretty easy to load it up with RSS feeds and other content so that you don't have to manually 'touch' the page that often - kind of like a 'start page'.

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