By managing both the content and the device on which to consume it, Amazon is in a fantastic position to do great things in the electronic publishing market. Later today, they’re expected to announce the new version of their ebook reader, the Kindle. The speculation is that it will be thinner, lighter, and easier to use. “The “Previous Page” and “Next Page” buttons are smaller and less intrusive, to prevent accidents.”, Forbes says. Most other articles about it are even less interesting.
The new Kindle will probably be the best ereader on the market. The current model is already arguably the best available, so improvements should cement that position. But until Amazon stops thinking about how to sell books in a new format and starts thinking about what fundamental changes to the way people read are now possible, whatever they might announce will be a disappointment.
It may be great for their bottom line – Amazon’s stock is doing quite well – but for everyone who isn’t a stockholder, incremental improvements to an expensive device that displays expensive words isn’t nearly as exciting as Amazon would like you to think. It’s still just a slightly more convenient way for people to purchase and read books.
What about enabling things that just weren’t possible with books made of paper? Interactive book clubs, automatic updates to serialized novels, communication with the author, or any number of things that become possible when you have an always-on internet connection. But Amazon, like everyone else in the market, is too focused on protecting the old way of doing things instead of embracing everything new.
Today, and in the days to come, you will hear a lot about how wonderful the new device is, how this one is really “the iPod for books”, and how great Amazon is. And then you’ll go back to reading books in more or less the same way you did before.