Shiny New E-Book Gizmo: The Amazon Kindle


View Full Version : Amazon adds Newsweek


bwit
03-13-2008, 08:27 AM
It looks like Amazon has added a Kindle version of Newsweek although they don't list it under the magazine section:

http://tinyurl.com/28n958

Bob

KlondikeGeoff
03-13-2008, 12:05 PM
Thanks for the tip. I had tried "Time" and found it not only difficult to navigate, but just did not like the articles, so canceled it after two weeks.

I used to like "Newsweek" better, but gave it up due to the small type and my vision problem. Guess I'll give it a try for a week or two.

KlondikeGeoff
03-13-2008, 12:15 PM
Wow, having second thoughts now. They charge $1.49 an issue, so 52 for a year would be $77.48 for the Kindle version, that has no charts, graphics or photos.

If you buy the paper edition from Amazon, you get 53 issues for $20, and that includes pictures. That is quite a discrepancy in cost.

Wassup, Amazon.com?

ETA: I knew the med I was taking was making me a bit fuzzy, and should account for this when reading anything. Going back, I now see the $1.49 is the MONTHLY charge. Sorry 'bout 'dat.

kovidgoyal
03-13-2008, 12:36 PM
More charging for free content. They really should rename the Kindle to the Swindle.

Alisa
03-13-2008, 12:59 PM
Does it not have ads?

bwit
03-13-2008, 01:35 PM
More charging for free content. They really should rename the Kindle to the Swindle.

I guess it depends on your point of view. I used to run scripts to pull content to a desktop machine. I then had to format it and manually sync it with a portable device. With the Kindle I just subscribe and the content shows up ready to read. That is worth a couple of bucks a month to me.

Bob

Nate the great
03-13-2008, 01:42 PM
More charging for free content. They really should rename the Kindle to the Swindle.

They're not charging for the content. They're charging for the service. Anytime you pay for an ebook or MP3, you're not paying for the content. It only takes a small amount of effort to find it free in the darknet. Instead, you're paying so you don't have to go looking for it. That is a service.

bwit
03-13-2008, 01:47 PM
Does it not have ads?

I haven't subscribed to Newsweek but none of the newspapers or magazines I have subscribed to contain ads.

Bob

kovidgoyal
03-13-2008, 02:00 PM
They're not charging for the content. They're charging for the service. Anytime you pay for an ebook or MP3, you're not paying for the content. It only takes a small amount of effort to find it free in the darknet. Instead, you're paying so you don't have to go looking for it. That is a service.

Umm you dont have to find newsweek on the darknet, it's available for free online from newsweek.com. The amount of effort it takes to write code to convert that to an ebook is minimal and onetime. I have been reading newsweek for free, every week on my sony reader for a year, at the click of a button, and so have many other users of libprs500. So Amazon is charging you for saving you from the effort of clicking a button and connecting your reader to the computer, once a week. Like I said the Amazon Swindle.

badgoodDeb
03-13-2008, 02:16 PM
Have you ever picked up a paper copy, to compare content? I'd be curious to know if all the paper articles are available online. The paper version points to the web site, and mentions top articles -- which I haven't seen in the paper version. (Though since I read other sites online, sometimes I have seen the newsweek article via a link from somewhere else).

kovidgoyal
03-13-2008, 02:31 PM
Newsweek makes its entire paper magazine available online, for instance see
http://www.newsweek.com/id/120176

In my experience there are typically more articles available online than on paper.

TheJohnNewton
03-13-2008, 06:02 PM
So should the paper version of Newsweek be called Swindleweek since they charge for it? Is the newstand that sells the paper version really the swindlestand? Maybe it's just fun to say because Swindle rhymes with Kindle? Perhaps they should rename Sony to Baloney? What about all those classic novels available for free that are also available for purchase (and not just at Amazon but all bookstores paper based and electronic.) Didn't Sony even have a promotion giving away these classics? They could have called it the Sony Big Baloney Giveaway! BTW, you can access the Newsweek url you mention above for free right from the Kindle web browser. Some swindle! Maybe it's just a matter of offering choices and letting the consumer decide which one best suits them?

kovidgoyal
03-13-2008, 06:10 PM
It's reasonable to charge for a paper edition, since it costs a significant amount to produce/distribute one. It is not reasonable to sell someone else's freely available online content. And I regard SONY's selling classics as just as bad.

And that's the whole point, Amazon hasn't offered the choice to be able to download and convert Newsweek (or any other online news source) on my computer and then transfer it to my Kindle if I prefer that to paying for its delivery. And no I'm not implying SONY is any better.

And as for reading it online on the Kindle, you're kidding right?
- I'd be surprised if the website even rendered correctly
- I'd be even more surprised if Amazon continued to offer free wireless connectivity.
- I'd be positively astonished if any significant number of people actually use an e-ink screen to browse the web

So yes, it is the Amazon Swindle.

EDIT: And if it makes you feel better to call SONY Baloney, go right ahead. The Swindle is just so much more witty. :-P

Halk
03-13-2008, 06:12 PM
I see where you're coming from John. However there's a huge (in my opinion) difference between 1.49 an issue and 1.49 a month.

1.49 a month is 75p to me, which is well, a can of coke or something. Fire 75p on to a monthly subscription and I wouldn't mind at all.

What might be a better idea instead, is to package a whole lot of magazine/newspaper type things and sell it for 5 dollars a month. Sure, nobody is going to read them all, but a share of the 5 dollars is going to come out to a much larger amount than all the 1.49s.

Perhaps this better explains it. In the UK (and I imagine in the US) we pay a subscription fee to cable or satellite TV for a package of channels. Many of the channels we would never pay for, no matter what the monthly fee was if sold separately. However package them all together, and we're happy to a pay a low price for 50 of them. We're so happy in fact that hordes of us pay for the 50 of them together and the companies make more money than they would selling them separately.

Nate the great
03-13-2008, 06:22 PM
It's reasonable to charge for a paper edition, since it costs a significant amount to produce/distribute one. It is not reasonable to sell someone else's freely available online content. And I regard SONY's selling classics as just as bad.

And that's the whole point, Amazon hasn't offered the choice to be able to download and convert Newsweek (or any other online news source) on my computer and then transfer it to my Kindle if I prefer that to paying for its delivery. And no I'm not implying SONY is any better.

Yes, they did. Yes, you can. It's called Mobipocket Desktop Reader.

Can you get all the content from Newsweek.com? I don't know. But it's there, it's free, and it can sync to your Kindle (if you have Desktop 6.0).

Halk
03-13-2008, 06:29 PM
Something else...

We're perhaps all victims of our own buying habits.

We all seem to think we want to pay for an item, and then get the use of it without paying more. Instead our buying habits dictate something else.

We want it now, we want it cheaper, and companies end up providing that and making up the difference elsewhere.

It's a well known "fact" (or at least it's highly believed to be a fact) that games consoles are heavily subsidised by the games that run on them.

People won't pay 600 quid for an Xbox and then a tenner a game (saying you want to doesn't make it true). Instead we'll pay 300 quid and 50 quid a game.

Amazon won't market the Kindle at the actual cost to them - i.e. development, production, advertising, network etc. They'll instead discount it and recoup the money in other ways.

The mobile phone market works that way too. We all take contracts and "free phones", instead we're just paying the phone on finance with a much higher line rental.

bwaldron
03-13-2008, 06:33 PM
So Amazon is charging you for saving you from the effort of clicking a button and connecting your reader to the computer, once a week. Like I said the Amazon Swindle.

I don't see any "swindle" involved. Some people are simply willing to pay for the convenience. Not my cup of tea, personally.

TheJohnNewton
03-13-2008, 06:36 PM
While I don't actually read Newsweek online on the Kindle (I actually get the paper version, gasp!) I do read The New York Times online on the Kindle. The browser is fine for text. The navigation at the New York Times site works pretty well on the Kindle browser. I don't know if it renders "correctly" but it's perfectly useable.

Yes I would bet they eventually charge for web access too. We'll see. I'm fine with being charged for a service that I find usefull. If I don't find it usefull I have the option not to use it.

You're wanting Amazon to offer some kind of software to run on your compter that would aggregate and format news in a Kindle friendly format? I think Mobi has some software (mobireader?) that does something like that but I've not tired it. (Kindle can use non-drm mobi format btw.) I'm pretty sure I saw somebody post that they were doing just this.

Isn't it really Newsweek that is selling the Kindle version? It's not like Amazon steals their free content from their free website, formats it in a Kindle version, and offers it for sale. If they did that would literally be a crime. Amazon is just a store facilitating the sale. Newsweek could sell other electronic version if they wanted (I have no idea if they do or not) or decide not to offer it through Amazon. The point is it's Newsweeks content and call on where and how to sell it or give it for free not Amazons.

Other than it's a cutsey rhyme I'm still not getting why the Kindle is a Swindle. You don't have to buy a single piece of content from Amazon if you don't want to. 90% of the content on mine is from other sources. I don't see how offering the choice of a subscription to those who wish to pay for it is a swindle? It's just a choice.

I feel no better calling the Sony Baloney. I think using either name is rather silly. They are just ereaders. If you like either one and it does things you need at a price that is fair to you then buy it. Otherwise don't. Where is the swindle (or baloney) in that?

bwit
03-13-2008, 06:37 PM
It's reasonable to charge for a paper edition, since it costs a significant amount to produce/distribute one. It is not reasonable to sell someone else's freely available online content.


OK, I'm confused. is it your contention that Amazon is ripping this content from the Newsweek site, selling it, and pocketing all the money? Does that seem to you to be something a big company like the Washington Post would tolerate?

Also, if that were the business model why would Amazon only have 9 magazines available. There are tons of magazines on the web and Amazon could rip content from all of them and sell it. Of course they might have to charge a little more to cover all the lawyers they'd need.

I'm sorry, your rants on this subject come across as sour grapes. You're happy with your Sony. You're happy with your free content. Amazon is not ripping you off for content. Relax, enjoy yourself, and leave us suckers alone!

Bob

TheJohnNewton
03-13-2008, 06:43 PM
Wow you guys post fast. So many posts while I was typing in mine. Maybe I'm just a slow typist, lol.

Halk, I'm all for subscriptions vs. buying. To me the reason to buy a paper book is because there is value in physically having it. In other words it takes time and money to actaully access a physical copy. So owning it and having it physically in your home has value. With electronic copies this is no longer the case (or the cost is so low it might as well be 0). I'd be all for subscribing to Amazon and just reading whatever book, magazine, or newspaper I want as long as I keep up my subscription. I really have no desire to own any of it. I do this for music, television, movies, and even for technical books already. To me I see no reason for anyone other than the creator to actually own content. I only want to pay to access content.

Halk
03-13-2008, 06:44 PM
I don't see any "swindle" involved. Some people are simply willing to pay for the convenience. Not my cup of tea, personally.

If there's an implication that you're paying for content that is not otherwise available free then there's a hint of a swindle going on there. As with the Sony classics. As far as I understand Sony were putting a value on stuff that is freely available. I think the intention may be to have people believe they are paying for the content, rather than paying for the packaging and delivery.

I can see both sides. Calling it a swindle is a little strong though.

Halk
03-13-2008, 06:48 PM
Wow you guys post fast. So many posts while I was typing in mine. Maybe I'm just a slow typist, lol.

Halk, I'm all for subscriptions vs. buying. To me the reason to buy a paper book is because there is value in physically having it. In other words it takes time and money to actaully access a physical copy. So owning it and having it physically in your home has value. With electronic copies this is no longer the case (or the cost is so low it might as well be 0). I'd be all for subscribing to Amazon and just reading whatever book, magazine, or newspaper I want as long as I keep up my subscription. I really have no desire to own any of it. I do this for music, television, movies, and even for technical books already. To me I see no reason for anyone other than the creator to actually own content. I only want to pay to access content.

I hadn't actually mentioned subscribing to books, I was meaning subscribing to newspapers/magazines. Subscribing to unlimited books would be really nice though, but I think a very difficult business model to get working.

TheJohnNewton
03-13-2008, 06:55 PM
Halk, I know of two companies that offer book subscriptions Books 24x7 (I get access through my work place) and O'Reilly Books Online. I used to subscribe to O'Reilly before I got free access to 24x7 through my employer. They have both been around for years so I assume they have figured out the business model. They are both very limited in what you can download though. That is fine for the technical books I use from those sites but I would want to be able to download into a reader for the books I would want from Amazon.

You can pay different fees to be able to acces different numbers of books. I actually have unlimted acces to 24x7 but when I had O'Reily I could access X (I forget the exact number) number per month. They offered different levels of access for different fees.

Halk
03-13-2008, 07:00 PM
Yes, that's no real surprise to me. What I meant was a business model that included as many books as you'd find in your local Waterstones. That kind of business model would be, well, let's say difficult :)

kovidgoyal
03-13-2008, 07:07 PM
OK, I'm confused. is it your contention that Amazon is ripping this content from the Newsweek site, selling it, and pocketing all the money? Does that seem to you to be something a big company like the Washington Post would tolerate?

Also, if that were the business model why would Amazon only have 9 magazines available. There are tons of magazines on the web and Amazon could rip content from all of them and sell it. Of course they might have to charge a little more to cover all the lawyers they'd need.

I'm sorry, your rants on this subject come across as sour grapes. You're happy with your Sony. You're happy with your free content. Amazon is not ripping you off for content. Relax, enjoy yourself, and leave us suckers alone!

Bob

The Washington Post has decided to adopt a business model for Newsweek where they make content available for free to their readers and make their money on adverts. They want more people to read Newsweek, for free so they can sell their ads at higher prices. If Amazon had instead offered the magazine in ebook form, with ads embedded, they would have been serving both their customers and Newsweek.

And if you dislike reading my "rants" on the subject, ignore them, or better, put me on your ignore list.

Alisa
03-13-2008, 11:08 PM
I would love to have both and ad-supported and ad-free option.

kevinpars
03-14-2008, 07:01 AM
When I debated the merits of the various ebook readers, I considered the fact that Amazon charges for blogs as well as for magazines that can be found for free online (The Atlantic Monthly is another example of a magazine that is free online).

What I decided was that when I get my ebook reader (in my case a Kindle) my life suddenly wasn't going to change. I would still work the same hours, still have access to a laptop at home. Since I went online the need for a magazine that contains concentrated news like Time/Newsweek has gone away for me, so I am not suddenly going to go back to reading one of them. And since I am online at work all day, I can check blogs the way i do today.

So it came down to books. Amazon has more available than Sony and the price seemed overall to be lower. And I liked the extras that came with the Kindle. But I don't think you can go wrong either way.

As for being 'ripped off,' that is a matter of opinion. A lot of what you are paying for is convenience. For example, I went ahead and bought the Silk Pagoda DVD with 10,000 books on it for $9.99 because I decided that was a whole lot easier than downloading them myself one at a time. On the other hand, the ten cent charge for getting documents converted by Amazon and sent directly to my Kindle is a non issue to me because I have no problem hooking up the USB cable and getting the free version and moving them to the Kindle myself.

Alisa
03-14-2008, 04:55 PM
Kevinpars, my usage habits are much like yours so I don't subscribe to blogs and periodicals. I'd rather read them online with all the comments, links and pictures. I also rarely email stuff to my Kindle. It's only when I'm really pressed for time or out and about. I think the value for these conveniences is higher for folks that are very mobile with their work. If I were constantly traveling I might find it quite worthwhile to have all these things automatically sent to me. The cost is pretty low, after all. It's just not worth it to me when since my routine lets me "pay" for more complete, better formatted content by renting a small amount of attention to the advertisers. After all, nothing is free.

Donnageddon
03-15-2008, 01:35 AM
I am going to take this opportunity to thank kovidgoyal for his tremendous work on Libprs500. What a fantastic tool! And I get Newsweek for free.

Thanks, kovidgoyal!

This post is in no way intended to slight Kindle, or its owners. There are many aspects of the Kindle I admire, and desire. Maybe I'll get Kindle 2.0

TallMomof2
03-16-2008, 09:10 PM
Maybe I'm spoiled but I like how Amazon repackages the blogs for delivery. It's far superior to MobiPocket's feeds. To me that's worth a little cash because I have no idea how to write a program/script that would duplicate the Amazon formatting.