Kindle to the rescue


Maybe there's something to this Kindle thing. People willing to pay for news content who wouldn't subscribe to a print newspaper. And geeks like it.

Remember, we're at version two. Most technology products don't really get prime time until version 3. Hey, I'm not into the Kool-Aid so far as to believe it's the answer, but it could one be one of many needed answers.

Update: Katie Allison Granju doesn't see the advantages over smartphones and free content.

Related Entries

6 Comments

Perhaps, but it still comes down to content. How many newspapers are left that have decent content?

We would love to replace our newspaper subscription, for which we're paying almost 150 dollars a yea, I think, with the Kindle version. We'd save a lot of money. But the cost of the Kindle is a hurdle to overcome since we're a 1-income household at present (I'm looking for a job).

Maybe if they reach a mass market price. Right now they are about as much as a low end laptop, making them essentially toys for the wealthy.

Now if newspapers had a deal like a 2 year's subscription, including the Kindle, that might help.

I think the real trouble is just lack of content. Why buy a newspaper if nothing in it is worth reading? I used to only get it for the comics and sports. The sports section in my local rag dwindled to about 8 pages, none very insightful (there being better alternatives online).

Don't count on it - putting the same crap in a different package seldom works.

http://money.cnn.com/2009/03/03/technology/copeland_epaper.fortune/ is a a great follow up on some of the clues on future business models.

I really like the idea of a subscription model bundles.

Best Regards,
Mans

Leave a comment



Recent Entries

  • A carnival of wish lists

    Image via WikipediaA roundup of the December Carnival of Journalism is up on the Guardian Developer Blog.My offering was called Just Surprise Me and is...

  • Just surprise me

    This month's Carnival of Journalism is themed for the holiday season.THE TOPICWith it being December, we thought we would adopt a Christmas theme for this...

  • The text message is still a teenager

    Source: Tatango SMS Marketing Cell phone text messaging turns 19 today. How long have you been texting? Related articlesSMS Marketing to College Students (tatango.com)Where...

  • A newspaper company invented the iPad

    And you thought it was Apple. Silly you. Samsung doesn't think so and its attorneys have set out to prove that. Who invented the iPad?...

  • Gannett, NYT launch comment system changes

    Gannett Corp. and the New York Times have rolled out changes to comments on their web sites. Gannett, which had been piloting using Facebook comments...

Subscribe to JackLail.com by Email
Close