Amazon to debut Kindle e-book reader Monday

Amazon is betting that e-books aren't a total e-bust.

On Monday, the online retail giant will unveil its Kindle e-book reader at a high-profile event in New York, an industry source told CNET News.com Thursday. Amazon.com CEO Jeff Bezos is expected to be present for the announcement, to be held at the chic W Hotel in Union Square.

The Kindle is equipped with a Wi-Fi connection that taps into an Amazon e-book store, which users can access to purchase new electronic books--and Amazon has reportedly signed onto a deal with Sprint for EVDO access. Additionally, the device comes with a headphone jack for audiobooks, as well as an e-mail address.

But the source said the Kindle apparently won't bear many other BlackBerry-like features such as a calendar or address book. The Kindle may also lack a backlight. Instead, it comes with a small reading light attached to an adjustable arm.

"They have a huge repository and huge track record of selling content. They also have customers who keep coming back to them."
--Richard Shim, analyst, IDC

From its inception, the Kindle has been geared toward "road warriors" and business travelers. The source told News.com that the device includes a feature to download digital editions of The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal each morning.

The company was also said to be considering a deal with the W Hotel chain to offer Kindle devices to guests, who would be able to check them out like library books.

The final price of the Kindle is expected to be $399, which is consistent with rumors and earlier reports. The industry source also added that Amazon had been looking to ink a deal for the launch so a hot book title could be bundled with the e-book reader.

This marks a major launch for Amazon. According to the source, Bezos has held this project very close, delaying it for more than a year to perfect the details. The company reportedly even studied the launch tactics Apple used for the iPod. In particular, the source said, Amazon's team liked the videotaped celebrity testimonials that accompanied the iPod's launch, and suggested that the Kindle launch may feature something similar.

Amazon did not immediately return calls for comment.

The Kindle device has been anticipated for quite some time, with specifications and early photographs surfacing more than a year ago. Earlier reports had claimed the e-book reader would be unveiled last month.

The industry source said Amazon experienced setbacks in the process, but attributed them in part to natural difficulties that a retailer would experience when expanding into the hardware business. One of the foremost challenges, the source added, was battery power.

But an even bigger problem was reportedly getting publishers onboard. Amazon wanted to have the biggest e-book catalog of any reader available, the source explained, to give it an advantage over other e-book readers and services that are already on the market.

The company is also said to have forged agreements with somewhere between 50 and 100 newspaper publishers, in addition to the daily New York Times and Wall Street Journal features. Kindle owners are expected to be able to select from a long list of publications for automatic download.

"The hardware isn't necessarily what's important," said Richard Shim, an analyst with IDC. "It's the delivery mechanism for the content. That's where Amazon has a major advantage. They have a huge repository and huge track record of selling content. They also have customers who keep coming back to them. One of the things that companies have neglected in the past is developing an e-book store where you can get the content and use the leverage to get the publishers to get content into a digital format."

In preparation for the launch, the source said, Amazon stopped selling e-book formats other than the Mobipocket about a year ago.

But electronic books have failed to catch on the way some predicted they would. Likewise, e-book readers haven't been a huge draw.

Sony unveiled the second edition of its Sony Reader device in October. The original Reader, released in September 2006, proved to be a bust. For the Reader's Version 2.0, Sony maintained the Reader's $300 price tag, the storage capacity (160 "typical" books), and the battery life (7,500 "page turns"), but improved the device's speed and navigation features and slimmed the hardware down.

Indeed, delays on the Kindle resulted in Sony's Reader hitting the market first. But the source told News.com that Bezos was ultimately unfazed, and told people he wanted the Kindle to have the kinks ironed out before it was offered to consumers.

More from News.com on this story's topics

Hardware

Create an email alert | RSS feed

Web sites

Create an email alert | RSS feed

e-books

RSS feed

Retail

RSS feed

Publishing

RSS feed

Amazon.com

Create an email alert | RSS feed

See more CNET content tagged:
e-book Reader, Amazon.com Inc., industry source, Richard Shim, Jeff Bezos

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 31 comments (Page 1 of 3)
My problem with e-books
by Stefan G November 15, 2007 3:00 PM PST
I love the concept of e-books. However, my biggest problem with them is the ridiculous price charged for most of them. They usually cost as much as a hardback book! I almost never pay that price for a regular book, and I would never pay that much for an e-book. If publishers would sell e-books at paperback book prices, I would love to buy them. I truly believe that publishers don't understand the market. The irony is that e-books have no production costs--you don't have to print a physical book! They can, therefore, charge whatever they like. I suspect that many people feel the same as I do. All the people I have talked to about this agree.
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
e-book readers
by diablojota November 15, 2007 3:26 PM PST
i think that e-book readers need to support some form of tablet pc properties. Tablet PCs are relatively unwieldy, and e-book readers are typically lack features that people would want. I want to be able to highlight parts of a book or pdf document, or write notes in the margins which could then be synced back to my computer. I read a lot of pdf files and I want to have a bit ability to manipulate them. I also don't want to spend more than 300 bucks for that functionality. Come out with something that actually solves the problem and people will buy it.
Reply to this comment View reply
Way too expensive
by krosavcheg November 16, 2007 4:42 AM PST
$399 to read a book, nope, you can buy an Asus EEE and read it on there for the same price. Amazon need to get this thing out the door for $99, its the only way it can stay on the market.
Reply to this comment View reply
Price Price Price
by talia_ali November 16, 2007 5:34 AM PST
I love the theory of e-books, but e-books chain me to my computer. I read paper books when I'm waiting for things, usually - in line, on the bus, on the train, in an airport. It's not usually practical to carry my laptop around, just to read a book. With e-books costing around the same as paperbacks, and also needing to buy special hardware to be able to treat the e-books as ordinary books, the price is just too high for me to afford.
Reply to this comment View reply
E-books work, but not if locked down
by Tsu Dho Nimh November 16, 2007 5:40 AM PST
Look at Baen.com and the way they handle eBooks: you can get them in several formats and read them on anything that can display the format ... and if you trash your hard drive you can download them all again. Is there "piracy"? Possibly, but apparently Baen is happy with the results, because they keep offering more books. They even give e-books away for free and watch the sales of hardcopy increase AFTER they give something away.
Reply to this comment View reply
E-book reader not competitive pricing
by JeffW42 November 16, 2007 6:59 AM PST
I have an Axim. I can read books in whatever format in the dark, listen to music, play games, review spreadsheets, browse the internet, talk on skype, make notes, control my TV, schedule my time, etc., etc. for LESS than $300. Plus, I added the necessary hardware and software for GPS for less than $399. E-book reader pricing makes no sense.
Reply to this comment
A bad idea...
by chuck_whealton November 16, 2007 12:52 PM PST
I don't know about other people, but if I had to bet, I'd bet that this is going to have a hard time succeeding. I like Amazon, I shop there often, but this is not a good idea. It's overly expensive, and I'll tell you what - when I stay at a hotel, I certainly won't be asking the staff if they have one of these book readers so I can read e-books or newspapers. > "The hardware isn't necessarily what's important" They're kidding, right? For $399? Charles R. Whealton Charles Whealton @ pleasedontspam.com
Reply to this comment
$399 Is Still Too Much
by FrankTurd November 16, 2007 1:08 PM PST
As others have mentioned, $399 for the hardware is *too* much. The cost of ebooks is also a problem. I believe in 5-10 years, ebooks and readers will be standard issue, but not until you can by the hardware for $20-$30.
Reply to this comment
DRM is bad and other thoughts
by bryan314 November 16, 2007 2:51 PM PST
Several people have commented about the "if I trash my device, I have to rebuy the content" they forget the other half of this as well: If I buy a paperback, I have the right to loan it out, sell it, trade it, use it to start fires, or whatever else I feel like. That said, I like Baen's price per book and the fact that I can read them on my pocket PC that I have to carry around anyway. WOULD be nice to be able to get e-versions of Wired and a couple newspapers, though....and I would love to be able to legally loan out my books. Never have been a fan of SELLING books, though that should be an option. textbooks would be GREAT to have in electronic format....10lb reader vs 5 or more 10-20lb books....no contest! Long as I can take notes at least as well as I can now on my PDA.
Reply to this comment
Maybe Amazon should rent the devices?
by twolf2919 November 16, 2007 6:10 PM PST
There is a coffee company, Gevalia I think, that gives away a coffee maker when you buy a certain amount of coffee. Perhaps Amazon should try this model, since nobody wants to spend $399 for an e-reader: if you promise to buy a certain number of books or enter a subscription plan, you get to use the Kindle for free; once the subscription is over or you're not buying books anymore, you have to send it back :-) Alternatively, if the life expectation of the Kindle is the equivalent of reading a 1000 books, then the books have to be cheap enough to allow the buyer to armortize the cost of the reader over 1000 books. And, above all else, the user of a Kindle must be able to download any book they've purchased via the service as often as they'd like. Another poster commented on how e-readers would not succeeed because they tie you to a PC: not necessarily! With wi-fi built in and the ability to store one's books at Amazon, you never need to connect to a PC. That is the same direction that Apple is finally going with their iPhone and iPod - you can download songs directly into these devices, bypassing the PC entirely. The only flaw in Apple's plan is that they don't provide for a way to store songs at their site - so people still need to connect to a PC to "backup" the stuff they bought! How bogus is that!
Reply to this comment
1 | 2 | 3 | Next 10 Comments >>
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement
RSS Feeds
Add headlines from CNET News.com to your homepage or feedreader.
Google
Yahoo
MSN
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Today's Top Stories
Yahoo tries to conceal lawsuit documents
Social graphs just wanna be free, but will they?
HP to launch fall line of teen-designed products
Conde Nast buys Ars Technica
Google to host 'Factory Tour' Monday morning
Most Popular Stories
Images: Microsoft telescope puts universe on your desktop
Photos: Cracking open the Atari 2600
This VC forecast scares the pants off of me
End of Intel, AMD duopoly near? Via readies Isaiah chip
The Internet thrives on dark energy
Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Amazon.com (0.45%) 0.34 76.46
Dow Jones Industrials (-0.05%) -5.86 12,986.80
S&P 500 (0.13%) 1.78 1,425.35
NASDAQ (-0.19%) -4.88 2,528.85
CNET TECH (0.05%) 0.88 1,783.62
  Symbol Lookup
Detroit auto show
Detroit auto show

Detroit auto show
advertisement
On GameFAQs: Grand Theft Auto IV (PS3) cheats & more!
Advanced
search
Advanced
search
Visit other CNET Networks sites: