Rabu, 20 Agustus 2014

The Nook Lives, with Help from Samsung

Like a zombie device wandering a post-apocalyptic landscape, the Nook, Barnes & Noble’s erstwhile Kindle Fire competitor, grotesquely endures.

The line of 7-inch tablets, largely given up for dead after the book chain failed to sell its hardware division and said it was abandoning the e-reader, today embarked on a feeble afterlife of sorts in the form of a co-branded color Android tablet produced in partnership with electronics giant Samsung. The two companies unveiled their device at a media event in New York City, adding to a market jammed with other Android tablets and dominated by Apple’s iPad. The new Nook’s odds of success are long, which is unfortunate. Readers, authors, book publishers–even mighty Amazon itself–desperately need a vibrant Nook.

The device itself has the wrappings of a typical 7-inch Android tablet like the Samsung Galaxy Tab. It costs $179, after a $20 rebate, and is now on sale at Barnes & Noble’s website and its 660 stores. Users who want to download digital media are directed to the company’s digital bookstore, which sits alongside the app-rich Google Play store pre-loaded on most Android devices. Front and center, though, are books, magazines, and comics. Tim Baxter, president of Samsung Electronics America, said in a statement that Samsung has taken the Galaxy tablet “and made it the best tablet available for reading and entertainment.”

Amazon dominates the market for electronic reading, with its Kindle apps on all kinds of mobile devices and its vibrant line of dedicated Kindle e-ink devices. With big rivals like Apple, Google and Samsung far more focused on games, apps and other kinds of digital media, the Seattle tech giant sells about 70 percent to 80 percent of all e-books. The costs of Amazon’s dominance continue to reverberate in the marketplace in the form of widespread tension with publishers and the distrust of authors who depend on Amazon for their livelihood.

A vibrant Nook, in addition to Canadian-based rival Kobo, could be a much-needed check on Amazon’s power. Readers, particularly ones turned off by Amazon’s tactics, could use an extra option in the marketplace. Amazon itself might be aided by a healthy rival if the Department of Justice ever starts sniffing around the lopsided balance of power in the book business.

Barnes & Noble has indicated that next year it will spin off its money-losing Nook Media division, which it says will continue to make dedicated reading devices like its Simple Touch and Glowlight e-readers. Many people dismiss the importance of reading-only black-and-white devices, but they are cheap, light, and generally loved by heavy readers. They also continue to get better. Amazon is working on a secret reading device in its Lab126 division that’s codenamed Ice Wine and is reportedly super-light and paper-thin.

Such devices could make e-reading easier and more elegant than ever. The market will be better served if there are companies besides Amazon making them.

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