The Nook is headed to the UK
Paul Oliver
According to Wired magazine’s Epicenter blog, Barnes & Noble is sponsoring a March 19th event in London for tech developers. The move would be a savvy one. B&N’s devices have… Read more »
According to Wired magazine’s Epicenter blog, Barnes & Noble is sponsoring a March 19th event in London for tech developers. The move would be a savvy one. B&N’s devices have… Read more »
Barclay’s analyst Anthony DiClemente made Wall Street news yesterday when he announced he was “cutting his estimates for [Amazon’s] sales of Kindle e-book reader and Kindle Fire tablet computer” because… Read more »
Jon Mitchell reports on Read Write Web that a new iPad app has not only advanced the way stories are published, but also created a noun. To better explain: ”Storify… Read more »
We read the following exchange in a tech column by Steve Alexander in the Minneapolis Star Tribune: Q: I bought a Sony e-book reader last year, but now I’d prefer… Read more »
Is bundling — selling a print book together with its digital version for one price — a good idea? Is it, indeed, an idea whose time has come? There have… 16 / Read more »
It appears books have reached yet another milestone in the relentless forward march of unnecessary but still kinda cool progress. Digital Buzz Blog shares the above video demonstrating a new “augmented… Read more »
You’ve all read what Jonathan Franzen thinks about ebooks. But we’re wondering what you think about what Jonathan Franzen thinks about ebooks, or whether you think it matters at all.… 2 / Read more »
It’s almost impossible to resist peeking at a friend’s bookshelf when we’re invited into their home. But this sentiment becomes a little scarier when it isn’t a welcome guest snooping… Read more »
Last week This American Life broadcast a big program focusing on Apple and its use of Chinese supplier Foxconn. (A story we’ve been following since April 2010, including here, here,… Read more »
Patrick B. Pexton, the ombudsman for The Washington Post, wrote an intriguing article for the Post wondering if “there’s just a bit too much innovation, too fast.” While acknowledging that “innovation is… Read more »