Get Your Strategy On
Are you intrigued? I am. Could this do for digital books what iPods did for digital music? Check out the AmazonKindle. Amazon already has more than 90,000 books available in digital format, including 100 of 112 current New York Times Best Sellers. I think I might need to get my hands on one of these.
Tony Morgan is a pastor and the Chief Strategic Officer at NewSpring Church where he develops creative solutions for communications, technology and NewSpring Ministries--the church's ministry that equips other church leaders.
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ListenToMe
November 30th, 2007 at 3:38 pm
This isn’t a blatant plug for the $34.99 referral payout for Amazon Associates is it?
Chris Chowdhury
November 30th, 2007 at 3:49 pm
First of all, who’s picture is that in the top right corner? Marcus Buckingham!!!
I’m pretty excited about this gadget, too. The thing that made the iPod so monumental is the way that it preserved the “album” aspect of music rather than just treating songs like “files”. If Amazon’s Kindle can help the avid reader hold onto some of that “sitting by the fire with a good book” feeling, then they may be onto something. I’d love to hold one and goof around with it a bit. The price should come down as more competitors release similar products. I’ll probably opt to get a digital book-reader (DBR?) when they’re in their 2nd or 3rd generations after the kinks are worked out a bit more.
Bernard Shuford
November 30th, 2007 at 4:00 pm
I would buy WAY too many books. I think I better stick with my library and Lifeway…. :) I’d love to have one, though.
Joshua Blankenship
November 30th, 2007 at 9:23 pm
Of course I haven’t touched one yet, so this might be slightly pre-mature, however…
I don’t think the iPod comparisons really work.
Music is an intangible thing (apart from packaging). Music is sound. The iPod didn’t *really* change the way listeners interacted with music; we’d been listening to songs through headphones for years. Now we can just carry more of it with us (even if it does sound worse because of the lower quality of digital files.)
But I don’t want to read books on a screen. I want to read books on paper. I want to underline things. i want (need!) to make notes in the margins. I need to dog-ear pages.
And more than that, I need to SHARE my books. If I shell out $400 for a Kindle reader (which, it must be said, is ugly as homemade sin), I can’t share my books - not even with another Kindle owner. I can’t print them out. I can’t transfer the digital book to another device. I’ve got a bunch of DRM-locked digital books that may or may not still be useful in 5 years when Amazon decides to release something else or abandon it all together.
But more than all that, it seems like the most useful environment for an eReader is traveling, especially plane travel. And what’s the crucial thing I can’t do in that 20-30 minutes just prior to and just after the plane in is the sky? The time when reading a good book would be just right?
I can’t USE ELECTRONIC DEVICES.
But all the luck in the world to Amazon. It might work.