Gadgets

iRiver Story Reviewed: Nice, But No Kindle…or Reader

PC Pro reviewed the iRiver Story. And to no one’s surprise, it’s not a bad eBook/PDF reader, but it’s too expensive compared to more established competitors.


August 13, 2009

Sony, Of All Companies, To Ditch Proprietary eBook Formats

Sony, which we’ve blasted in the past for an insistence on proprietary formats, will support the open standard ePub format for its ebook readers. Open, of course, doesn’t mean “free of DRM”: This is really a jab at Amazon.


March 22, 2008
Gadgets

Amazon Kindle and Sony Reader Locked Up: Why Your Books Are No Longer Yours

If you buy a regular old book, CD or DVD, you can turn around and loan it to a friend, or sell it again. The right to pass it along is called the “first sale” doctrine. Digital books, music and movies are a different story though. Four students at Columbia Law School’s Science and Technology Law Review looked at the particular issue of reselling and copying e-books downloaded to Amazon’s Kindle or the Sony Reader, and came up with answers to a fundamental question: Are you buying a crippled licence to intellectual property when you download, or are you buying an honest-to-God book?


November 20, 2007
Gadgets

Amazon Kindle vs Sony Reader Bitchfight

Wired has compared the features of the new Amazon Kindle and the Sony Reader. They don’t give a definitive verdict yet, but point out the $400 Kindle’s biggest drawback: lack of “format neutrality.” Labeled as a “portable DRM bookstore”, the Kindle won’t be able to read open formats like Acrobat PDF. We agree. You will be the judge but, while the $300 Sony Reader may not have always-on Internet connectivity, looking at the specs it seems like a better option. At least on paper:

AU: I take back my ‘I want one’ from yesterday. Having seen the fact they want to charge you for everything, even your own files, I’m thinking this is going to fail. It’s a less than elegant device design, too. Hmmm. -SB


September 11, 2007
Uncategorized

Sony Reader, New and Improved?

A literary tech site has spotted an alleged update to Sony’s not-terribly-popular Reader. The PRS-505 doubles the memory capacity of the original PRS-500—it can now hold 160 books rather than 80. The new Reader also has an improved E-Ink screen, comes in a choice of colours and has a much smarter button layout and interface. But will any of this fussing actually help sell Readers?