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			 Tea Enthusiast 
			
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		#17 | |
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			 Wizard 
			
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		#18 | |
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			 Grand Sorcerer 
			
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 Epub is an open standard; anyone with a text editor can make their own epubs from scratch. Since the Kindle has a web viewer, it obviously has some form of .html support; adding .epub support should be a very simple matter, as software goes. The real issue isn't fileytype support, but DRM; if Amazon added non-DRM'd epub support, they'd be flooded with complaints from people who bought a B&N ebook and then discovered it won't open on the Kindle. And Amazon doesn't want to pay for ADE support.  | 
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		#19 | 
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			 Grand Sorcerer 
			
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			Sony started with LRF, its own proprietary format, before switching to epub. And it was out before Amazon; it could not have chosen to use "Amazon's format" for customer convenience, because Amazon didn't have one when the Sony Readers were first sold.
		 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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		#20 | |
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			 Guru 
			
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 Why would they want to do that? Be completely reliant on a competitor for a big part of your business? It doesn't bother Sony and Kobo because they don't really have much of an e-book business (and B&N uses their own scheme)  | 
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		#21 | 
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			 Guru 
			
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			But all e-books still use a proprietary format for DRM.  Either Adobe or Amazon. Why should Amazon exchange their proprietary format that they own, for one that they don't own?
		 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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		#22 | |
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			 Guru 
			
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 Mobipocket is an older standard than ePub.  | 
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		#23 | |
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			 Sharp Shootin' Grandma 
			
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		#24 | |
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			 eBook Enthusiast 
			
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		#25 | |
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			 Interested Bystander 
			
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 The UK is the only European country that Amazon are actually trying to sell Kindles to. Last year your statement would have been true of the UK as well, but once Amazon decided it wanted to be in the market, it came in with a bang. Who is to say that the same wouldn't happen if it targeted Germany or France next?  | 
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		#26 | 
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			 Wizard 
			
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			I must say I have a lot of epubs which I'm reading on my Kindle. Calibre does a great job to convert mobi <---> epub without any (seeable) conversion lost. 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
	Well, there is the DRM obstacle but this is another discussion point. Btw. all the B&N Nook guys out there. Your epub format isn't ADE compatible as well and uses a proprietary DRM scheme. So you're not that different to the Amazon guys.  
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		#27 | |
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			 Banned 
			
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 No matter this entire tying of a device to a given store and format is going to eventually lose out. And why? Because tablets all but eliminate the matter as B&N, Amazon and who knows who else all have reader software for about any OS platform which works around the whole exclusivity inanity. So maybe the question is, which online store will move first and release a TABLET device rather than a dedicated reader. This is what Apple did and why? Because it makes sense and ironically is one of the few times Apple ever did not limit their users from accessing content to the point of inducing compromise for the end user.  | 
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		#28 | |
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			 Old Git 
			
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		#29 | |
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			 Groupie 
			
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 Apple has been selling and continues to be tops in the music market, even though the Itunes format is fairly proprietary (I know very little about the Apps side). Yet, people can easily go both ways in buying from other sources (i.e. Amazon's MP3 store, etc.) and still use them on the IPod, etc. or one can buy I-Pod music and convert it to MP3 fairly easily... Heck even before the ITunes store removed DRM it didn't take much effort to get music from the ITunes format to a non-DRM or MP3 format. The EBook industry is no different than the music in that regard. It is kind of sad really because you'd think the EBook industry would try to learn a little from the music one, but unfortunately it didn't.  | 
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		#30 | 
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			 Connoisseur 
			
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			the epub argument seems silly. .mobi's been around for a long time. epub isn't some magical, better format. the nook reads epub. so what. that doesn't mean nook owners can buy ebooks from kobo or from the sony store. the bigger question, is when will *everything* we want to read be available for whichever reader we've decided to adopt, including library borrowing. there are all kinds of german books i'd like to be able to download from german bookseller sites, but there are no kindle editions; and even if i had a sony reader, i wouldn't know whether i'd be permitted to download the book until the moment of attempted purchase, when there's a good chance my purchase would be shut down because of geographical restrictions. because -- why? they want me to buy some translation into english? that ain't happening. i don't read translations of anything i could read in the original. 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
			point being, we all have our specific reading needs/desires *which should be fulfilled*. there are a lot of bigger problems than format. format is invisible to me as a reader. if my device will read it, it'll read it. feedbooks and manybooks allow us to choose our preferred format, as does o'reilly. it's when my device *won't* read something i'd like to read that i start grumbling. i will also grumble if a book i've purchased is suddenly unreadable by any device i have. but i really don't give a special rip about epub, because lack of epub isn't the problem. drm, geographical restrictions, and which formats are readable by devices are the problem. Last edited by thorn; 01-15-2011 at 03:04 PM.  | 
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