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Category: eBooks

Kobo Vox tablet review [Video]

The Kobo Vox tablet feels like a missed opportunity.

Over the last year, the scrappy Canadian e-reading company has released the impressive Kobo Touch eInk eReader and polished its Kobo Reading Life apps into worthy rivals to Amazon's Kindle apps and Barnes & Noble's Nook apps on tablets and smart phones.

The company is in the process of being purchased by Japan's equivalent to Amazon, the massive online retailer Rakuten. Despite Kobo's largest U.S. retail partner, Borders, closing its doors, it seemed that Kobo was akin to a promising, aspiring prizefighter on the brink of being ready to challenge the heavyweight champs of e-reading, Amazon and Barnes & Noble.

The Kobo Vox, on top of a Amazon Kindle Fire and a Barnes & Noble Nook TabletAnd then I used the Vox -- Kobo's answer to Amazon's Kindle Fire and Barnes & Noble's one-two punch of the Nook Color and Nook Tablet.

With the Vox, Kobo has taken a step back, delivering a product that doesn't come close to its rivals and one that doesn't match up to the quality I expected given how much I like the Kobo Touch and Kobo reading apps on Google's Android and Apple's iOS devices.

On paper, the Vox looked like a smart move, selling for $199.99 and featuring a seven-inch touch-screen with eight gigabytes of built-in storage -- that's the same included storage and price as the Fire and the same as the Nook Color (the Nook Tablet sells for $249). Just as the Nook Color and Nook Tablet do, the Vox features with a MicroSD card slot, which can accommodate a card of up to 32-gigabytes in size, if you don't mind buying one.

Like the Fire and the Nook, the Vox runs a modified version of the Android Gingerbread operating system, designed by Google with phones, not tablets in mind.

But unlike those two others, Kobo has only made minimal changes to Gingerbread, most noticeably pinning reading-related functions to the bottom of the Vox's Android home screens.

I was hopeful Kobo would deliver a competitive product, but instead I found myself disappointed at just about every turn in using the Vox.

The hardware, from the outside, isn't bad looking. The back of the Vox is great to hold on to, with Kobo's signature quilted pattern rendered in a soft and grippy plastic. On the review unit I tested, a light-blue rim of plastic sat between the back of the Kobo and its 1020 x 600 pixel resolution display.

It's nice to see a company take a bit of risk design-wise, especially when compared with the boring looks of the Kindle Fire. The Vox is also offered with lime-green, pink and black rims.

But once I turned on the device, it was mostly downhill.

The Vox starts up slow, and I failed to ever reach the seven-hour battery life Kobo claims for the Vox. I usually got about four or five hours of battery life, but there were about four times in my week of testing that the device would shut itself off when falling below an 80% charge (a couple of those delays struck when we were shooting the above video).

When the Vox was up and running, it did so sluggishly. Loading apps, menus, Web pages; checking email; opening e-books; turning pages in e-books -- everything took place slowly. It felt as though the Vox was always a step, or a second or two, behind my touch input. The display also fails to match the clarity, brightness, color range or viewing angles of the Fire and the Nook Tablet.

Snappy, speedy, responsive -- these are not words I would use to describe the Vox. Too often I found myself staring at a rotating gray circle waiting for something to load. This complaint can partly be attributed to lower-end internal specs, such as an 800-megahertz processor and 512-megabytes of RAM, but if tuned enough with the right software, such hardware shouldn't be so slow.

Continue reading »

Black Friday: Barnes & Noble to sell a $79 Nook Simple Touch

BN.com screenshot

Barnes & Noble's Nook Simple Touch e-reader is getting a $79 variant just for Black Friday.

A limited number of the devices will be available at that price in stores only and only on the day after Thanksgiving, the traditional start of the holiday shopping season.

The Black Friday edition is the same as the regular $99 unit available in Barnes & Noble bookstores and online, except that the Black Friday edition has a white rim. The regular Simple Touch's rim is the same dark blue-gray as the rest of the exterior.

The other specs are the same. The device weighs 7.48 ounces, measures 6.5 inches tall and five inches wide and is about as thick as a No. 2 pencil. The 6-inch eInk screen renders text in black and white. The battery can go an average of two months before needing a charge. The e-reader can store about 1,000 books. More storage is available using the device's SD card slot.

The Simple Touch also features a nice concave back making it more comfortable to hold during long reading sessions.

Barnes & Noble didn't say how many of the special units would be sold, but they're likely to sell out quickly, as many deals on Black Friday do.

The company's biggest competitor, Amazon.com, sells a Kindle e-reader year-round at $79 but that unit lacks a touchscreen and runs ads on its home screen and screen saver. A touchscreen Kindle sells for $99 but still, unlike the Nook, runs ads. To get an ad-free Kindle, $139 is the starting price.

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— Nathan Olivarez-Giles

twitter.com/nateog

Image: The Black Friday edition of the Nook Simple Touch as shown on BN.com. Credit: Barnes & Noble

Amazon looking to release a smartphone next year, analyst says

Kindle-foneAmazon.com Inc. may be putting a smartphone on the books.

The longtime bookseller and online retailer is broadening its business to include not just electronic reading devices and tablet computers like the just-released Kindle Fire, but also handheld smartphones, according to business intelligence gleaned by Mark Mahaney, an analyst at Citi.

Mahaney says he thinks Amazon will release a mid-priced smartphone by the fourth quarter of 2012 -- one that could cost less than $200 and that will be customized to work with Amazon's digital movies, music and e-books.

"We continue to believe Amazon has now set its eyes on the mobile (and tablet) media and product
consumption frontier," Mahaney wrote in a note to investors.

Mahaney said industry whispers indicated that Amazon would be working with Foxconn International Holdings, a subsidiary of the Taiwanese company Hon Hai Precision, a global leader in electronics manufacturing that makes other Amazon products as well as Apple's iPhone and iPad.

Further scuttlebutt from Mahaney on the specifications of the tablet:

We believe the smartphone will adopt Texas Instrument's OMAP 4 processor and is very likely to adopt [Qualcomm's] dual mode 6-series standalone baseband given [Qualcomm] has been a longtime baseband supplier for Amazon's e-reader.

If the rumors are true, the phone may also have an 8-megapixel camera, a 4-inch touch screen and an HSPA+ radio -- part of the newer generations of cellular technology that allows for faster data uploading and downloading.

"With the clear success of the Kindle e-reader over the past three years, and Kindle Fire possibly succeeding in the low-priced tablet market, we view this as the next logical step for Amazon," Mahaney wrote.

His note did not mention the type of software the phone might run, but in passing he cited a possible "OS royalty to Microsoft." Because of patents it owns, Microsoft collects royalties from many manufacturers of mobile devices running Google's Android operating system. The Kindle Fire is one such Android-based device.

Amazon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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-- David Sarno

Image: Photo illustration using images from Plenty.r / Flickr and andyi / Flickr

New Netflix app ready for Kindle Fire and Nook, but not iPad

Netflix announced a revamped tablet app now available for the Kindle Fire and Barnes and Noble's Nook, but not for the iPad

The great tech horse race of 2011 pits the iPad, that thoroughbred of tablet computers, against a pair of new lightweight fillies, the Kindle Fire and Barnes and Noble's Nook

But this year, the race may not be decided by horsepower alone. Indeed, in the run-up to the frenzied holiday buying season, the Android manufacturers are focusing less on their devices' technical prowess, and more on the kinds of things that people can do with them.

Last week, Amazon announced that the Kindle Fire will feature a "Lending Library" that will let paying users borrow a limited selection of books. Then Amazon pushed Hulu Plus, saying the for-pay TV and movie rental service would also be available on its Kindle Fire, along with music apps Pandora and Rhapsody.

And now, not to be left behind, Netflix is joining the party, announcing a revamped tablet app now available for the Fire and the Nook.

But not for the iPad. That version will arrive "in the coming weeks," the company said.

"It's nothing more than a timing issue," wrote Netflix spokesman Steve Swasey in an email, explaining that the Android release was timed to coincide with the Kindle Fire and Nook releases this week, and that there was no favoritism involved. "Netflix is agnostic on platforms -– no preferences or priorities," he wrote.

Still, that means iPad owners will have to be content with the older version of the Netflix app. Swasey did not reply to a question about whether the new version of the iPad app would be available by holiday buying time.

The new app, which Android users can download now, fits twice as many movies on the screen as the earlier version, and lets users easily swipe through many categories of films and TV shows, as well as begin streaming videos directly from within the app.

Check this space for continuing handicapping of the tablet derby.

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-- David Sarno

Twitter.com/dsarno

Image: The new Netflix app for Android.  Credit: Netflix

Japan's Rakuten to buy e-reader maker Kobo for $315 million

Kobo Vox tablets

Canadian e-reader maker Kobo is being taken over by Rakuten, a Japanese online retailer, for $315 million.

The two companies announced the deal late Tuesday, with Rakuten (Japan's equivalent to Amazon.com) buying Kobo, which is now owned by Indigo Books & Music (Canada's equivalent to Barnes & Noble) and to a much lesser extent by Borders, the bankrupt chain of U.S. bookstores. 

Kobo said that Rakuten is "one of the world's top 3 e-commerce companies by revenue" and that the purchase deal will help the two companies grow both their e-reader and digital retail businesses by creating an ecosystem of downloadable media and devices for consumers.

"Kobo provides one of the world’s most communal eBook reading experiences with its innovative integration of social media, such as Facebook and Twitter; while Rakuten offers Kobo unparalleled opportunities to extend its reach through some of the world’s largest regional e-commerce companies, including Buy.com in the U.S., Tradoria in Germany, Rakuten Brazil, Rakuten Taiwan, Lekutian in China, TARAD in Thailand, and Rakuten Belanja Online in Indonesia, and of course, Rakuten Ichiba in Japan," Hiroshi Mikitani, Rakuten's CEO and chairman, said in a statement.

Kobo said it expected the sale to close in early 2012. The Toronto company said its new owner plans to keep the same management team and employees in place.

"From a business and cultural perspective this is a perfect match," Kobo CEO Michael Serbinis said in a statement. "We share a common vision of creating a content experience that is both global and social. Rakuten is already one of the world's largest e-commerce platforms, while Kobo is the most social eBook service on the market and one of the world's largest eBook stores with over 2.5 million titles."

The deal will also enable Kobo to "diversify quickly into other countries and e-commerce categories," Serbinis said.

Kobo's diversifying could help it compete more aggressively with Barnes & Noble's Nook line of e-readers and tablets and Amazon's Kindle devices. Amazon, unlike Barnes & Noble and Kobo, sells moves, music and apps and not just e-books.

This month, Kobo will release its Vox tablet, a gadget with a 7-inch display that runs Google's Android Gingerbread operating system and is being positioned as an alternative to the Nook Tablet and Kindle Fire.

RELATED:

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Amazon Kindle Fire tablet: $199, 7-inch screen, ships Nov. 15

Barnes & Noble unveils Nook Tablet at $249 as Kindle Fire rival

-- Nathan Olivarez-Giles

Twitter.com/nateog

Image: Kobo Vox tablets. Credit: Kobo

Amazon's Kindle Cloud reader now lets you read e-books via Firefox

Kindle-cloud

If you forgot your Kindle, iPhone, Android smartphone, MacBook, iPad, Galaxy and Xoom tablets at home today not to worry, you'll can still get access to your Amazon e-books.

The company said Tuesday it would now let readers peruse their Kindle books through Firefox, the second-most popular Web browser. Using its Kindle Cloud service, Firefox readers can sign in to their Amazon accounts to get a virtual bookshelf of every Kindle book they've ever bought.

This is another step toward an e-books everywhere strategy Amazon has been cultivating for several years. The Kindle Cloud has been available through Google's Chrome browser and Apple's Safari browser, but Firefox will bring online Kindle access to a sizable contingent of Web users. Firefox is used by closed to 25% of the Web browsing public -- second to Internet Explorer at 38%, according to StatCounter numbers compiled on Wikipedia. Firefox's creator, Mozilla, says the browser has 450 million worldwide users.

Before Amazon brought its Kindle reader service to the browser, users had to download a standalone PC program to read the books offline. 

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Kobo Vox tablet, $200, to take on Kindle Fire, Nook Color

-- David Sarno

Image: A screen shot of the Kindle Cloud reader in Firefox 8.0. 

Barnes & Noble Nook Simple Touch e-reader drops to $99

Barnes & Noble Nook Simple Touch eReader

Barnes & Noble dropped the price on its Nook e-reader, now renamed the Nook Simple Touch, to $99 on Monday.

The price cut, down from $139, came alongside the unveiling of the new Nook Tablet at $250 and the drop in price of the Nook Color tablet to $200 from $250.

Along with the price change will come a software change to all touch-screen e-Ink Nooks that will result in faster page turns and sharper text, the bookseller said. The Nook's hardware will remain the same, with a promised battery life of two months with about 1 hour of reading a day and a 6-inch touchscreen.

The Nook Simple Touch's price drop will put the device even in price with Amazon's upcoming Kindle Touch with Special Offers, which runs ads on the Kindle's home screen and screen saver (something the Nook doesn't do). 

RELATED:

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-- Nathan Olivarez-Giles

twitter.com/nateog

Image: Barnes & Noble's Nook Simple Touch e-reader. Credit: Barnes & Noble Inc.

Amazon Prime launches Kindle Owners' Lending Library

Amazon Kindle Owner's Lending Library

Amazon Prime has added Kindle book lending to its list of perks, alongside streaming movies and TV shows and free two-day shipping from Amazon.com.

The service, which Amazon seems to be building up as a Netflix rival and even a "Netflix for books," runs at an annual subscription price of $79.

The Seattle-based tech firm and online retail powerhouse's Kindle Owners' Lending Library allows Amazon Prime members to borrow one book a month from a specific selection that Amazon said includes "over 100 current and former New York Times Bestsellers." Amazon said the Lending Library has more than 5,000 titles to choose from.

Of course, in order to read the borrowed Kindle books, an Amazon Prime subscriber has to own a Kindle e-reader or have a device with a Kindle app to read the books on -- such as a smartphone, tablet, laptop or desktop computer.

Seems straightforward enough, right? Barnes & Noble has offered a similar feature called LendMe that has no cost associated with it and allows Nook owners to lend Nook books to friends for up to 14 days.

But the Kindle Owners' Lending Library isn't without its own controversy.

As noted on our sister blog Jacket Copy, Amazon "had approached publishers about participating in the program for a flat fee -- and many turned them down. Much to their surprise, their books appeared as part of the program anyway."

What Amazon's bold move mean for e-books and Kindle lending remains to be seen, but head over to Jacket Copy to read more about the growing backlash.

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-- Nathan Olivarez-Giles

twitter.com/nateog

Image: A screenshot of the Kindle Owners' Lending Library for Amazon Prime subscribers. Credit: Amazon.com

Is Barnes & Noble launching a new Nook on Monday?

Nook Color

Is Barnes & Noble Inc. set to launch a new Nook?

In a few weeks, Amazon's Kindle Fire and Kobo's Vox tablets will go on sale, entering the low-end tablet space that Barnes & Noble's Nook Color has occupied for about a year.

Nook event inviteSo far, Barnes & Noble hasn't announced any new Nook tablet plans, but the Web is buzzing with speculation that it's all heading that direction after the bookstore chain and e-reader maker invited the media to a Nook-related event in New York on Monday.

The invitation for the event reads simply, "Please join us for a very special announcement" under a shining green Nook "n" logo.

Could we see a new Nook? It's likely. If we were to see a new Nook device, it probably would be an update to the Nook Color.

Barnes & Noble replaced its old eInk e-reader in May with the market's second touch-screen e-reader (just a day behind the launch of the Kobo Touch) -- so that's unlikely to see a replacement anytime soon.

The current Nook Color and the upcoming Kindle Fire and Kobo Vox each run versions of Google's Android operating system and feature 7-inch touch screens.

Another possibility is changes to Barnes & Noble's Nook Friends social network, which allows users to see what their friends are reading, read reviews of books, lend books to one another, share quotes from a book, list their progress in a book and recommend titles to a buddy.

Whatever the Nook news is Monday, we'll have it covered here on the Technology blog. Stay tuned.

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-- Nathan Olivarez-Giles

twitter.com/nateog

Images: (Top) Angry Birds running on a Barnes & Noble Nook Color tablet and (bottom) an invitation to a Nook event in New York on Nov. 7. Credit: Barnes & Noble

Google scientist's book raises real, fictional privacy concerns

In the data laboratories of the Internet's biggest companies -- the Googles, Facebooks and Yahoos of the world -- statisticians practice the mysterious art of spinning vast troves of personal consumer data into marketing gold.

BalujaAs with the famously confidential Coca-Cola recipe, the companies do not share their secret alchemical strategies for taking data gleaned from consumers' phones, tablets and PCs and using it to build intricate behavioral profiles of users, the better to sell them products they are most likely to buy.

As we wrote in our recent story on digital privacy, the lack of transparency about these practices has led to widespread concern about how Internet companies are using the information they collect -- including how long they keep the data, with whom they share it, and the types of conclusions they can make about individual behavior.

But Shumeet Baluja, a data scientist at Google, has made an end run around the wall of secrecy that protects corporate data practices. Instead of sharing Google's approach to data security and privacy, he's written a fictional account of a Google-like company -- and what happens when the wrong people get access to its huge storehouse of private information.

The book, "The Silicon Jungle," came out in the spring. Its dustjacket describes it as raising "serious ethical questions about today's technological innovations and how our most confidential activities...can be routinely pieced together into rich profiles that reveal our habits, goals and secret desires."

We asked Baluja about the story behind his book, and his own thinking on the state of consumer privacy and data collection.

How would you rate the level of awareness of the general public about what’s done with their data?

It's pretty poor.  People in general know they should be concerned about privacy, but I think very few people understand what it means to have privacy.  They certainly don't understand what data mining is, or what the capabilities are of the companies out there that are looking at their data.  This is a big impetus in writing this book: I wanted to show from a personal level to a national level -- from every level -- the ramifications of giving these little bits of data away.

Is there any way for people to figure out the kinds of data that are being collected about them?

That's absolutely key to having trust in any company at this point. How much will they actually tell you about what they’re doing with your data?  If you look at the big companies out there, the major players, we're in contact with them every day as users -- whenever we post updates or do searches, we reveal a lot about ourselves.  

A few [companies] have started allowing you to say "I would like you to get rid of some of this information you have on me.” And that’s extremely important.  Without that, I would suggest users be very careful.

But are the leading companies offering much of a window into what they're collecting?

Even when users can see the individual pieces of data they’ve given, what's harder to figure out is what inferences can be drawn from that.  And that’s what data mining is about -- drawing inferences from the small pieces of data you have.

[Those inferences] get harder to reveal because they're obviously very proprietary. So it’s a little bit of a tricky game as far as that’s concerned. 

The fact that I bought some golf shoes, or took a vacation to Hawaii, or drove home on the 405 Freeway don’t seem too interesting by themselves, but what about when you put all of the pieces together?

Well, let’s go through your example: Besides the fact of drawing inferences about where you live and your vacation habits, perhaps you could tell what your demographic status is, your income level for example.  We could look at the type of hobbies we’d expect you to have, the types of products you’d be interested in buying.  And by further looking at what you search for, what products you buy, and where you travel -- we can then revise our hypotheses.

So it’s kind of like a living profile?

Absolutely. When someone considers a profile -- it's not the case that it's created once and then forgotten about. Every interaction you have then goes back to feeding that profile and either enforcing our conclusions or making us come up with new ones.

What does Google think about the book?

As you can imagine, I’ve been very careful not to talk about my company in this interview. But Google has been extremely supportive, which has been awesome of them. That being said, talking about the book in general is fine but I’d shy away from talking about any policies they’d have.

You, someone who has been intimately involved in data mining for major companies, have written a nightmare scenario type of book about what could go wrong if all these data were leaked. Should people take your book as a warning sign, even if it is fictional?

As a scientist who's worked in this field for 15 years, I think that besides talking about the great things that have come from it, it's also important to talk about the things that could go wrong -- it’s not so much to scare, but to clearly inform people that there are consequences to sharing so much personal information.  

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-- David Sarno

Image: Cover of "The Silicon Jungle."  Used with permission of the author.

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