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Sony: no bells and whistles for eBook readers

Sony Reader

By Reuters and Barry Collins

Posted on 18 Dec 2009 at 08:16

Sony's digital eReaders should focus on the printed word and making reading "comfortable," rather than becoming multimedia machines, according to the company's boss.

Sony chief executive Sir Howard Stringer admits there is a lot of "energy" behind Amazon's Kindle, which is seen as the leader in a burgeoning market for portable reading devices.

And as speculation grows that Apple will introduce a tablet-style computer that could also address the eReader market, Sony could differentiate itself by adding more powerful chips, displays and media features to the pocket-sized readers.

But Stringer says that, given the nascence of the market, it is smarter to wait and see how consumer warm to the current devices. "The consumer will tell us if this format is comfortable and helpful and convenient and all those things before you start ploughing on a thousand apps," or making the "Vaio Reader" Stringer claims.

In fact, Stringer is hoping the simplicity of the Sony Reader will prove more attractive than its feature-packed rivals. "I think there is plenty of audience to go around," he claims. "I think it will be interesting to see if this is the reader of choice, particularly for older audiences who don't need a million other applications. There is a whole generation that may learn to love this. We might as well let them find out."

Sony, Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble are in a heated fight over who will emerge with the best-selling electronic reading device, each beefing up their devices with exclusive content or high-tech features.

Sony claims sales of its eReaders are "phenomenal," but refuses to disclose any figures. Executives also say they don't know how sales stack up against the Kindle.

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User comments

Agreed. But books WOULD be nice!

SONY could lean on the book publishers to bring their prices into the same room as reality at least.
For what they are and what they take to prouce and distribute they should be as cheap as iPhone apps (£0.59)

By cheysuli on 18 Dec 2009

Well 59p would be a good price so long as you can live with poor formatting and lots of OCR errors. Paying Editors & Proofreaders adds a lot more to the cost.

By nrmsmith on 20 Dec 2009

What do you need proofreaders for? They already have the text digitalised for the pinted book so its a simple matter of converting it to pdf. Hardly somthing you need a team of editors for.

I just can't understand how they get away with charging more for an e-book than an actual paperback.

By kingct on 20 Dec 2009

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