Kindle Back in Stock

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Amazon's front page today is announcing that the Kindle is back in stock. They also provide a link to Jeff Bezos' annual letter to Amazon shareholders, which is dedicated to his thoughts about the Kindle. Nothing earth shattering, though I do think he tries to get to the heart of the question about why someone would buy a Kindle when they already own both a Blackberry and a desktop or notebook computer. After the obligatory reference to Gutenberg, Bezos writes:

Lately, networked tools such as desktop computers, laptops, cell phones and PDAs have changed us too. They've shifted us more toward information snacking, and I would argue toward shorter attention spans. I value my BlackBerry--I'm convinced it makes me more productive--but I don't want to read a three-hundred-page document on it. Nor do I want to read something hundreds of pages long on my desktop computer or my laptop. As I've already mentioned in this letter, people do more of what's convenient and friction-free. If our tools make information snacking easier, we'll shift more toward information snacking and away from long-form reading. Kindle is purpose-built for long-form reading. We hope Kindle and its successors may gradually and incrementally move us over years into a world with longer spans of attention, providing a counterbalance to the recent proliferation of info-snacking tools.

This is an interesting way to position Kindle or any eBook reader--the competition isn't the other devices per se but the habits these other devices have accommodated. This is true, I suppose, but I still think that devices will emerge that support both kinds of information consumption--the short form and the long form. What's missing in Kindle, interestingly, are some features that would make "information snacking" also possible--and useful. As David Guenette pointed out, the Kindle could have readily added MP3 support ("It has the ICs and jacks for playing MP3 files, but no playlist management, nor--absurdly enough, considering that Amazon is set up to sell things like music--any iTunes-like music downloading.") Plus the idea of paying to read a blog that is otherwise free on the Web is just silly.

So we are still left with, as David calls it, the "additional device conundrum." I have been using an eBook reader lately, and enjoying it, but there are limitations with that one and what I can read on it. I want to be able to read, at minimum, books, magazines, newspapers, blogs, general web sites, and a wide range of personal content including but not limited to Word, HTML, PDF, and XML formats. I want it to be brain-dead easy to download and access new content. As David points out, I also want multimedia. And I want a level of interactivity to include links, forms, and feedback. I want it to be cheap, powerful, and sturdy, and I want the reading experience to be superior to my notebook computer in terms of size, weight, portability, and readability. In other words, I want something like the Kindle in form factor that behaves much like a really good notebook computer.

Is that too much to ask?

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