At the health club, I got around to actually reading the Newsweek piece. Maybe it was just the gym-generated adrenaline, but I was jazzed. All those thousands of book titles at my fingertips. A more environmentally-friendly way of distributing the written word. A design that recalls the shape and feel of a paperback, giving the gizmo an instant retro twinkle before it even catches on. Talk about preemptive strike!
But then, when I was back on the shopping trail, I got to thinking about the appeal of good old fashioned books. My holiday gift list includes at least a dozen books for mom, dad, brother Ramone and the like. I bet only a quarter of those books will actually be read. The others will just stand handsomely on a shelf. And that doesn't bother me, because displaying a book is part of the pleasure of owning a book. The trophy book. We all have'em. An ad buddy has a whole army of terribly hip and just plain terrible marketing books lined up in his office, supposedly read and digested but frankly not looking very dog-eared.
After a laudable launch, can Kindle overcome the decidedly non-digital joys of buying a real book?
I guess the big innovation here is the e-ink thing that makes the experience more book-like. But come on... Kindle is around $400 (which ain't cheap), and is essentially a closed platform for the sole purpose of granting me the privilege of buying stuff from Amazon.
What are they smoking? Everybody knows that the reason iPod works is because of mp3. It works despite, not because of, the DRM-crippled iTunes stuff.
Despite the brilliant marketing, Kindle isn't ever going to work. And we're all going to be better off because it won't work.
Don't waste your $400 - it won't be long before they're giving these things away for free.
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