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View Full Version : Sony Japan to focus on ebooks for cell phones
grimo1re 05-19-2008, 06:06 AM Sony plans to exit the Japanese market for the delivery of ebooks to PCs and its dedicated ebook reader. Instead, the company will focus only on delivering content to mobile phones, the Nikkei Business Daily (http://www.nni.nikkei.co.jp/AC/TNKS/Nni20080516D16JFA14.htm) reported this week.
Sony’s wholly owned subsidiary Timebook Town (http://www.timebooktown.jp/) provides ebooks, ecomics and other content for use on PCs and the Librie ebook reader. However, since halting production of the Librie last year, Sony has decided to stop the Timebook service per February 2009 and liquidate the subsidiary.
From then on, Sony will only focus on delivering content to mobile phones. Sony’s Publishing Link, which launched services in December 2007 offering ebooks, ecomics and other mobile content, will be expanded. Sony said that demand for ebook readers remains strong in the US and other overseas markets so it will continue ebook sales for devices and PCs in those markets.
BooksForABuck 05-19-2008, 10:35 AM I'm glad that the Japanese eBooks on cellphone market is so strong but I hate to see Sony exit the eBook market in Japan. They may claim that the eBook reader market is strong in the US and that they'll sustain the product here, but it's hard to justify a business that doesn't sell in your home market.
Rob Preece
Publisher, www.BooksForABuck.com
Ervserver 05-19-2008, 10:59 AM I guess they find reading books on 2 inch screens more enjoyable over there
HarryT 05-19-2008, 11:45 AM To be honest I'm surprised that they've kept the Librie bookstore open this long. It was a commercial disaster, by all accounts.
kacir 05-19-2008, 01:23 PM We have to remember that the Sony owned TimeBook Town is THE ONLY WAY of how to load book to your Sony Librie reader. There are some ugly hacks that enable you to read - gasp - your own text - that is text not purchased from TimeBook. Even legally ... aehm ... "purchased" books expire after 2 months.
It means all libries become expensive paperweights per march 2009.
It is scary to see how Sony treats the suckers^H^H^H^H^H^H^H customers that purchased their product. Phew!!!
rmeister0 05-19-2008, 01:40 PM Sony said that demand for ebook readers remains strong in the US and other overseas markets so it will continue ebook sales for devices and PCs in those markets.
The missing part of the quote:
"...for now."
:smack:
lovebeta 05-19-2008, 02:28 PM We have to remember that the Sony owned TimeBook Town is THE ONLY WAY of how to load book to your Sony Librie reader. There are some ugly hacks that enable you to read - gasp - your own text - that is text not purchased from TimeBook. Even legally ... aehm ... "purchased" books expire after 2 months.
It means all libries become expensive paperweights per march 2009.
It is scary to see how Sony treats the suckers^H^H^H^H^H^H^H customers that purchased their product. Phew!!!
Never, ever, underestimate the ugliness of Sony's business ethics. They the biggest control freaks to date, probably along with apple.
pilotbob 05-19-2008, 02:59 PM Never, ever, underestimate the ugliness of Sony's business ethics. They the biggest control freaks to date, probably along with apple.
I'm sorry, it's business not ethics. When a product line costs more to maintain than the revenue it produces it is generally dropped. Even if I got a Kindle and they told me all my books where safe in the "media library" I am still going to download them to my PC and archive them somehow.
BOb
brecklundin 05-19-2008, 03:59 PM Never, ever, underestimate the ugliness of Sony's business ethics. They the biggest control freaks to date, probably along with apple.
No 'bout-a-doubt-it...anyone remember the Sony "root kit" debacle? ;) I am just happy I bought my Clie nx73v at a thrift store for $16 vs. buying it new only to be abandon as the "wonderful" Mylo's came out...bleech...Sony and Apple should just merge to form the anti-keyrist and be done with it...
radleyp 05-19-2008, 04:21 PM That's the very same picture that accompanied a NYTimes article of a few weeks ago that dealt with Japanese not just reading on their cellphones but actually writing entire novels on them (the verdict being that they read like long text messages). I think this is a terrible development: reading and writing on a screen that small encourages the composition of short sentences and almost no paragraphing, with no real layout even a possibility. In any case, it will lead to a transformation of the printed page that will seriously transform the way we read.
JAcheson 05-19-2008, 06:07 PM Well, if you are going to make your money selling content, you are going to make a lot more of it selling content for the device everyone already has.
Also, with a huge corp like Sony, it is probably more relevant to focus on the division of Sony doing this, instead of the corporation as a whole. Sony Pictures, Sony Music and Sony Computer Entertainment probably had minimal involvement in this, so bringing up the rootkit fiasco is mostly irrelevant.
Donnageddon 05-19-2008, 06:17 PM This is the message I do not want to see on Sony's ebook store
http://musicstore.connect.com/
I think with the existing hacks for uploading content to the Sony Reader, the Reader will continue to have a life for a long time (I still use my minidisc players), but I would not recommend buying a lot of Sony DRM'd books.
I would hope that Sony would provide a mechanism for reformatting their DRM'd books (making them useful after your Reader dies) if their Reader was ever discontinued. But based on my experience, that ain't gonna happen.
nekokami 05-19-2008, 06:25 PM I would hope that Sony would provide a mechanism for reformatting their DRM'd books (making them useful after your Reader dies) if their Reader was ever discontinued. But based on my experience, that ain't gonna happen.
They probably couldn't do that even if they wanted to-- the publishers would scream. The most you can hope for is that they'll transfer your record of purchase to someone else, like Fictionwise or Amazon. And that would likely only happen if they get bought by one of those entities.
Donnageddon 05-19-2008, 07:01 PM No doubt, neko. With the Sony minidisc players, you still have the option of playing your music out through the earphones and rerecording the music on a computer, or other device... at real time.
Perhaps if Sony discontinues the reader and ebook store, we can all just take pictures, page by page of our DRM'd books and make our own paperbacks!
:smack::smack::smack::smack::smack:
Shenzhov 05-19-2008, 09:11 PM My bets are that after they pull this off in Japan, Sony will dump the connect store and ebook reader here in the U.S. They are probably waiting on the next round of their cell phones for sale here in the states towards the end of this year. I remember replacing my Palm V with a Sony Clie and 3 weeks later Sony dumped the hand held business here. Several months later my install cd would not work so I tried to download the Clie software and was met with the "we are no longer in that business" message.
I bought a PRC 505 against my better judgment and after trying to use the Connect store ordered a Kindle several months later. That was my last sony product "ever".
HarryT 05-20-2008, 03:21 AM I have a Sony TV, a Sony DVD recorder, and two Sony laptops. They make excellent products, IMHO.
Alexander Turcic 05-20-2008, 04:19 AM I have a Sony TV, a Sony DVD recorder, and two Sony laptops. They make excellent products, IMHO.
I heard Sony LCDs (like the Bravia series) are among the best money can buy. No doubt, Sony makes some excellent hardware. On the software side, however, ...
HarryT 05-20-2008, 04:56 AM No arguments there :).
tebaldo 05-20-2008, 04:59 AM We have made a specific analysis on the Japanase epaper market. Electronic ink devices are seen as future extensions of mobile phone for better reading (as for Nokia, if you noticed).
TallMomof2 05-20-2008, 08:20 AM I can't imagine reading for any length of time on a cell phone. Mine has a largish screen but it's still smaller than any PDA I've owned. Plus every phone I've owned gets pretty darn hot the longer it's used.
HarryT 05-20-2008, 09:03 AM The "Pocket PC" type Windows Smartphone (I have an "HTC Touch" model) makes a reasonable bookreader. I wouldn't want to use mine as my primary reading device, but it's certainly perfectly acceptable as a "backup" reader. I use MobiPocket Reader on mine, so I can read the same books as I do on my CyBook Gen3.
mbovenka 05-20-2008, 10:34 AM I used uBook on my HTC Wizard (aka T-Mobile MDA Vario) for quite some time. Works well enough, if you don't mind small text (I don't). I even used to use CSpotRun on a Palm Vx before that.
But having a Cybook now, I can't imagine going back :-).
radleyp 05-20-2008, 10:38 AM I used ereader and mobipocket for years on a variety of pda's and cellphones (T3, TX, Nokia? and my present smartphone, the MotoQ) but since I got my Kindle over the holidays, I have not read books on anything else. I no longer like the phone screen to read on and as someone else has said, the phone gets hot when kept on for many minutes.
bwaldron 05-20-2008, 12:09 PM No 'bout-a-doubt-it...anyone remember the Sony "root kit" debacle? ;) I am just happy I bought my Clie nx73v at a thrift store for $16 vs. buying it new only to be abandon as the "wonderful" Mylo's came out...bleech...Sony and Apple should just merge to form the anti-keyrist and be done with it...
Sony's abrupt dropping of the Clie line -- plus the rootkit issue -- was one of the reasons I didn't really consider the 505, nor do I purchase any other Sony products for that matter.
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