Folllowing has potential to make available lots of ebooks for people with
blindness, but I am not sure about the accessibility of .MOBI and .PRC
format. The fact that Kindle e-book reader uses MOBI and .PRC format is not
mentioned in the following article.

November 19, 2007 7:04 AM PST

Amazon debuts Kindle e-book reader

Posted by 
Caroline McCarthy 

NEW YORK--"Why are books the last bastion of analog?" Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos
asked an audience at New York's W Hotel in Union Square as he unveiled 
Amazon Kindle
, the online-retail giant's new electronic book reader.

"Books have stubbornly resisted digitization," he elaborated. "I think
there's a very good reason for that, and that is, the book is so highly
evolved and
so suited to its task that it's very hard to displace." 

Indeed, with the launch of Kindle, Amazon is hoping to succeed where
hardware companies like Sony have failed. No e-book reader has ever been a
market success.

CNET News.com reported last week
 that Amazon would be debuting its much-delayed e-book reader, which the
retailer on Monday started selling for $399. 

Kindle tips the scales at a total 10.3 ounces--"That's less than a paperback
book," Bezos said--and uses an "electronic ink" technology to mimic paper,
not a computer screen. There is no backlight. Currently, the screen is
black-and-white; Amazon executives have confirmed that 
E Ink, which manufactures the screen technology for Kindle as well as for
other e-book readers like the Sony Reader, has a prototype of a color
display; however, that technology is not yet ready for market.

The battery life, company representatives said, will last several days to a
week. A charger can juice up the battery in a matter of two hours.

Notably, Kindle does not require a PC for synchronization or any software to
be installed. "Instead of shopping from your PC, you shop directly from the
device. The store is on the device, and then the content is wirelessly and
seamlessly delivered to the device," Bezos explained. 

Amazon's new "Kindle Store" now stocks more than 90,000 titles, "including
101 of 112 current New York Times Best Sellers and new releases, which are
$9.99,
unless marked otherwise," according to a release from the company.

"This is BlackBerry for blogs." 

--Guy Kawasaki, managing director, Garage Technology Ventures

Kindle, which was manufactured by an undisclosed Chinese original equipment
manufacturer, connects to its specialized Amazon store via an EV-DO
(Evolution
Data Optimized) cellular network through "Amazon Whispernet," built atop
Sprint's EV-DO network. No data plan or monthly bill is required. "We pay
for
all of that behind the scenes so that you can just read," Bezos said, adding
that he estimated that it would take "less than a minute" to download a
book.

The device can hold about 200 books, the CEO explained. A slot for a
standard SD memory card can increase that capacity to about 1,000 books.

Bezos also announced that dozens of newspapers, from The New York Times to
France's Le Monde, would also be available for the device, as well as
magazines
and 300 of the most popular blogs, such as BoingBoing and Slashdot. "On
Kindle, newspapers are delivered while you sleep, automatically," he said.
The
publications will receive a cut of the subscription fee revenue, as no
advertising will be displayed on them.

Additionally, Kindle comes with an electronic dictionary and access to
Wikipedia. Each device, as News.com reported, also provides the user with a
personal
Kindle e-mail address so that word-processing files such as Microsoft Word
documents, as well as image files, could be sent to the e-book reader.

After unveiling the device, Bezos showed the audience a video of numerous
literary and technological luminaries who provided testimonials about
Kindle;
including authors Toni Morrison and Neil Gaiman, and entrepreneur Guy
Kawasaki, who said, "This is BlackBerry for blogs."

But even though the development of Kindle took three years, Bezos said, it
still couldn't be entirely perfect. "We never did figure out how to do
virtual
book signings," he said. Nevertheless, the Amazon chief executive reiterated
that the book is due for a 21st-century makeover. 

"We forget (that the printed book) is a 500-year-old technology, and we sort
of forget that it's even a technology," Bezos mused. "Gutenberg would still
recognize a modern-day book."


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