Showing posts with label google iriver vs kindle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google iriver vs kindle. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Kindle Iriver Story HD Google Vs Kindle Wifi Amazon


After taking on Facebook with the introduction of Google+ last week, Google is giving Amazon a run for its money this week by launching its own e-reader, the iriver Story HD. The device will retail in Target stores and online starting July 17 for $139.99, which puts it in direct competition with the Amazon Kindle Wi-Fi.

Gallery: iriver Story HD vs. Kindle Wi-Fi
First introduced at CES 2011 and pegged for a May arrival, the Story HD has an impressive 6″ XGA (1024X768) e-ink display with “63% more pixels and faster page turns than the competition,” according to iriver’s January press release. It sports a Freescale Cortex A8 CPU, with 2GB of onboard storage, a SDHC card slot and built-in Wi-Fi.


Like Amazon’s Kindle, the Story HD features a QWERTY keyboard but offers an up/down button for page-turning, rather than the more common left/right button. Judging from Engadget’s early demo of the e-reader, it looks to be the same slim size as the Kindle Wi-Fi, but with a two-tone design that extends to the back cover. iriver claims the Story HD will last 3-weeks without a charge but did not specify how it arrived at this number. My guess is the Wi-Fi must be turned off with the lowest possible screen setting to achieve this duration.

iriver’s Story HD is designed for Google’s e-Books platform, with direct access to over three million free (in public domain) and for-purchase Google e-Books (including over 250 independent bookstores) via Wi-Fi. Because Google’s special sauce is that is content is in the cloud, users can access most e-books online without having to download a copy locally (except copyright-protected works). Plus, they will have the added benefit of being able to continue reading the same cloud-based e-book from desktop to phone to e-reader, without having to move the same file between multiple devices. Of course, the Story HD is not absolutely tied to the Google cloud: it also supports Adobe EPUB and PDFs with DRM, which means users can also enjoy public library e-Books as well as paid content, offline.

Google is not limiting its customers to only those who purchase an iriver Story HD; it is also making its e-books available to other platforms (PCs, iOS and Android phones and tablets, and other e-readers like the Nook and Sony Reader), and more g-Readers are to come according to today’s announcement. But is Google too late to the game to compete with Amazon or even Barnes & Noble’s e-collection and established partnerships with publishers?

source: zdnet.com
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