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From: Sr K9/30/2011 7:23:27 AM
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The Newsstand

And by offering buyers a newsstand, publishers can avoid having to worry that their magazines are getting lost in a jumble of other media. This has long been a complaint of theirs with Apple, which is set to introduce its own newsstand next week.


bits.blogs.nytimes.com 

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From: Sr K10/1/2011 12:17:54 AM
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BUSINESS WORLD | SEPTEMBER 30, 2011, 7:11 P.M. ET

Amazon and Our Giant Connected Heads
In the future robots will have to do the work, because we'll be consuming media.


online.wsj.com 

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From: TimF10/4/2011 4:46:46 PM
1 Recommendation   of 161304
 
With Silk, Does Amazon Want a Slice of Google’s Pie?
By JENNA WORTHAM

bits.blogs.nytimes.com 

The Implications of Amazon's Silk Web Browser
By Joe Brockmeier / September 28, 2011 11:13 AM / 0 Comments

readwriteweb.com 

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From: Sr K10/11/2011 12:20:36 PM
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Penny Marshall memoir to be published by Amazon 10/11 12:02 PM

--

CHICAGO (MarketWatch) -- Filmmaker and actress Penny Marshall's memoir "My Mother was Nuts" will be published not through a traditional house but via Amazon.com next fall, the Associated Press reports. The star of "Laverne & Shirley" and director of "Big" will write about, among other things, her marriage to Rob Reiner, friendship with the late John Belushi and her recent battle with cancer, her agent John Strone told the wire service. "People have always asked me how I got from the Bronx to Hollywood, so I thought it was time to tell how it all happened," Marshall said. "I have had many lives (not in the Shirley MacLaine sense) and you will hear about them all." Strone told the AP that several publishers bid for the book, but Amazon topped them all while also offering a higher royalty on the book than the standard 25%.

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From: Sr K10/14/2011 3:40:39 PM
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ATH an hour ago. High of the day 245.75.
Now 245.57b, 245.68a.

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From: Glenn Petersen10/15/2011 9:21:34 PM
2 Recommendations   of 161304
 
Birth of a Salesman

Behind the rise of Jeff Bezos and Amazon: Richard L. Brandt on the founder's Texas roots, the site's chaotic early days, why negative reviews are allowed and his increasing use of personal data.

RICHARD L. BRANDT
Wall Street Journal
October 15, 2011

Jeffrey Preston Bezos was 4 years old when he first arrived at his grandfather's cattle ranch in Cotulla, Texas. The Lazy G is a sprawling 25,000-acre spread in the southwest part of the state—an unspoiled habitat of mesquite and oak trees, the home of whitetail deer (popular among local hunters), wild turkeys, doves, quail, feral hogs and sheep.

Jeff's maternal grandfather, Lawrence Preston Gise, was a just-retired rocket scientist who was ready to trade in his missile research for the simple and demanding life at the ranch, and he wanted to share that life with his grandson. Until he was 16 years old, Jeff spent every summer there.

At the ranch he learned to clean stalls, to brand and castrate cattle, to install plumbing and to handle other ranch-hand tasks. One day, his grandfather towed in a dilapidated D6 Caterpillar bulldozer with a stripped transmission. Fixing it would be tough: He would have to remove a 500-pound gear from the engine. No problem; he simply built himself a small crane. Jeff helped.

"One of the things that you learn in a rural area like that is self-reliance," Mr. Bezos said. "People do everything themselves. That kind of self-reliance is something you can learn, and my grandfather was a huge role model for me: If something is broken, let's fix it. To get something new done you have to be stubborn and focused, to the point that others might find unreasonable."

*** In the summer of 1994, Mr. Bezos quit his job in New York as a vice president at the financial-services firm D.E. Shaw. He and his wife, MacKenzie, moved to Seattle to take advantage of the explosive growth of the Internet and to start Amazon. The company's original name, Cadabra, was nixed after someone misheard it as "cadaver."

Their first rental, a three-bedroom house in the suburb of Bellevue, cost $890 a month. Mr. Bezos chose it in part because it had one crucial requirement—a garage, so that he could boast of having a garage start-up like Silicon Valley legends from Hewlett-Packard on. The garage had actually been converted into a recreation room, but Mr. Bezos figured it was close enough.

The site was launched on July 16, 1995—just as masses of people started moving onto the Internet and before many competitors had created strong commercial sites.

Mr. Bezos moved the company to an industrial neighborhood that it shared with a needle-exchange program and a shuttered pawnshop. He had 1,100 square feet of office space on the second floor and 400 square feet in the basement to use as a warehouse. The desks were made from cheap doors, with sawed-off two-by-fours for legs. The warehouse could store just a few hundred books on their way from the distributor to customers.

Thanks to discounts of 10% to 30%, orders started coming in as soon as the site launched. At first, there were a half-dozen orders per day. One of the programmers set up the computers so that a bell would ring every time an order came in. A great novelty at first, it quickly got annoying and had to be turned off.

Three days after launch, Mr. Bezos got an email from Jerry Yang, one of the founders of Yahoo. "Jerry said, 'We think your site is pretty cool; would you like us to put it on the What's Cool page?' " Mr. Bezos later recalled. "We thought about it some, and we realized it might be like taking a sip from a fire hose, but we decided to go ahead and go for it." Yahoo put the site on the list, and orders soared.

By the end of the week, Amazon took in over $12,000 worth of orders. It was hard to keep up. That week, the company shipped just $846 worth of books. The following week brought in nearly $15,000 worth of orders, and the team was able to ship just over $7,000 worth of them.

At launch, the site wasn't even truly finished. Mr. Bezos's philosophy was to get to market quickly, in order to get a jump on the competition, and to fix problems and improve the site as people started using it. Among the early mistakes, according to Mr. Bezos: "We found that customers could order a negative quantity of books! And we would credit their credit card with the price and, I assume, wait around for them to ship the books."

During the first few weeks, everyone at the company was working until two or three in the morning to get the books packed, addressed and shipped. Mr. Bezos had neglected to order packing tables, so people ended up on their knees on the concrete floor to package the books. He later recalled in a speech that, after hours of doing this, he commented to one of the employees that they had to get knee pads. The employee, Nicholas Lovejoy, "looked at me like I was a Martian," Mr. Bezos said. Mr. Lovejoy suggested the obvious: Buy some tables. "I thought that was the most brilliant idea I had ever heard in my life," he said.

Despite what seemed to be a pathetically amateurish operation, Amazon grew up very quickly once it was launched. By October, the company had its first day logging in 100 book sales. In less than a year, it had its first hour with an order of 100 books. Word kept spreading, despite the fact that the company did virtually no advertising its first year. The one exception: Mr. Bezos hired mobile billboards to cruise by Barnes & Noble stores displaying the question, "Can't find that book you wanted?" along with Amazon's website address.

The company's customer service—which Mr. Bezos later called "the cornerstone of Amazon.com"—started with the founder himself answering emails. By 1999 it was manned by 500 representatives packed into cubicles and answering customers' questions.

The people handling these emails were generally overqualified and underpaid, with no experience in bookselling. Disaffected academics were popular because they were well-read and could supposedly help find books on a huge variety of topics. They were paid about $10 to $13 an hour, but with the possibility of promotions and stock options dangled before their glazed eyes. The best of them could answer a dozen emails a minute. Those who dropped below seven were often fired.

One customer-service manager recalled that, when the staff got a week and a half behind in answering emails—despite putting in 12-hour days, seven days a week—Mr. Bezos called her to complain. When she told him they couldn't work any harder, he came up with a solution: They dedicated one weekend to competing with each other to see who could get through the most unanswered emails.

During that 48-hour period, everyone worked at least 10 hours beyond their regular shifts. Each person was given a cash bonus of $200 for every thousand messages he or she could answer. It cleared out the backlog.

In the very early days, Mr. Bezos had employees pick out the 20 strangest titles sold every week and awarded a prize for the strangest. Some of the winners: "Training Goldfish Using Dolphin Training Techniques," "How to Start Your Own Country" and "Life Without Friends."

One of his more controversial early decisions was to allow customers to post their own book reviews on the site, whether they were positive or negative. Competitors couldn't understand why a bookseller would allow such a thing. Within a few weeks, Mr. Bezos said, "I started receiving letters from well-meaning folks saying that perhaps you don't understand your business. You make money when you sell things. Why are you allowing negative reviews on your Web site? But our point of view is [that] we will sell more if we help people make purchasing decisions."

Over time, Mr. Bezos's unusual management style began to develop. He's not always a "nice" CEO. He can inspire and cajole but also irritate and berate. He can see the big picture—and micromanage to distraction. He's quirky, brilliant and demanding.

One former executive recalled that, at an offsite retreat where some managers suggested that employees should start communicating more with each other, Mr. Bezos stood up and declared, "No, communication is terrible!"

He wanted a decentralized, even disorganized company where independent ideas would prevail over groupthink. He instituted, as a company-wide rule, the concept of the "two-pizza team"—that is, any team should be small enough that it could be fed with two pizzas.

From the beginning, Mr. Bezos was fanatical about squeezing from Amazon.com every incremental degree of usefulness. New features were often simple things, like 1-Click ordering—whose notorious patent was called by one law journal "probably the most memorable example of an unoriginal software patent." It forbids any other online retailer from using a one-click purchasing option without paying a royalty to Amazon.

An elderly woman once sent an email to the company saying that she loved ordering books from the site but had to wait for her nephew to come over and tear into the difficult-to-open packaging. Mr. Bezos had the packaging redesigned to make it easier to open.

He continues to try to improve the site. In June 2008, Amazon filed a patent application titled "Movement recognition as input mechanism." Customers may soon be able to make purchases simply by nodding their heads at their computer, Kindle or cellphone. Industry wags have dubbed it the "1-Nod patent."

Last December, word leaked out about another new patent, for a system that enables people who get gifts through Amazon to return them even before they arrive. If Aunt Mildred has a habit of sending unwanted gifts, the patent says, the site will include an option to "convert all gifts from Aunt Mildred." (The patent includes the name of the presumably fictitious relative.) It allows the receiver to track when the well-meaning relative buys a gift for him and to change it to something more desirable before it ships. Gift recipients can also apply other rules such as, "No clothes with wool."

The idea is not only to please fussy would-be gift recipients; it also could save Amazon millions of dollars in purchases that don't have to be exchanged. The patent lists Mr. Bezos as the inventor.

—Mr. Brandt is the author of "The Google Guys." This essay is adapted from his new book, "One Click: Jeff Bezos and the Rise of Amazon.com."

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203914304576627102996831200.html

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From: Road Walker10/17/2011 3:20:42 AM
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Amazon Signs Up Authors, Writing Publishers Out of Deal
By DAVID STREITFELD
SEATTLE — Amazon.com has taught readers that they do not need bookstores. Now it is encouraging writers to cast aside their publishers.

Amazon will publish 122 books this fall in an array of genres, in both physical and e-book form. It is a striking acceleration of the retailer’s fledging publishing program that will place Amazon squarely in competition with the New York houses that are also its most prominent suppliers.

It has set up a flagship line run by a publishing veteran, Laurence Kirshbaum, to bring out brand-name fiction and nonfiction. It signed its first deal with the self-help author Tim Ferriss. Last week it announced a memoir by the actress and director Penny Marshall, for which it paid $800,000, a person with direct knowledge of the deal said.

Publishers say Amazon is aggressively wooing some of their top authors. And the company is gnawing away at the services that publishers, critics and agents used to provide.

Several large publishers declined to speak on the record about Amazon’s efforts. “Publishers are terrified and don’t know what to do,” said Dennis Loy Johnson of Melville House, who is known for speaking his mind.

“Everyone’s afraid of Amazon,” said Richard Curtis, a longtime agent who is also an e-book publisher. “If you’re a bookstore, Amazon has been in competition with you for some time. If you’re a publisher, one day you wake up and Amazon is competing with you too. And if you’re an agent, Amazon may be stealing your lunch because it is offering authors the opportunity to publish directly and cut you out.

“It’s an old strategy: divide and conquer,” Mr. Curtis said.

Amazon executives, interviewed at the company’s headquarters here, declined to say how many editors the company employed, or how many books it had under contract. But they played down Amazon’s power and said publishers were in love with their own demise.

“It’s always the end of the world,” said Russell Grandinetti, one of Amazon’s top executives. “You could set your watch on it arriving.”

He pointed out, though, that the landscape was in some ways changing for the first time since Gutenberg invented the modern book nearly 600 years ago. “The only really necessary people in the publishing process now are the writer and reader,” he said. “Everyone who stands between those two has both risk and opportunity.”

Amazon has started giving all authors, whether it publishes them or not, direct access to highly coveted Nielsen BookScan sales data, which records how many physical books they are selling in individual markets like Milwaukee or New Orleans. It is introducing the sort of one-on-one communication between authors and their fans that used to happen only on book tours. It made an obscure German historical novel a runaway best seller without a single professional reviewer weighing in.

Publishers caught a glimpse of a future they fear has no role for them late last month when Amazon introduced the Kindle Fire, a tablet for books and other media sold by Amazon. Jeffrey P. Bezos, the company’s chief executive, referred several times to Kindle as “an end-to-end service,” conjuring up a world in which Amazon develops, promotes and delivers the product.

For a sense of how rattled publishers are by Amazon’s foray into their business, consider the case of Kiana Davenport, a Hawaiian writer whose career abruptly derailed last month.

In 2010 Ms. Davenport signed with Riverhead Books, a division of Penguin, for “The Chinese Soldier’s Daughter,” a Civil War love story. She received a $20,000 advance for the book, which was supposed to come out next summer.

If writers have one message drilled into them these days, it is this: hustle yourself. So Ms. Davenport took off the shelf several award-winning short stories she had written 20 years ago and packaged them in an e-book, “Cannibal Nights,” available on Amazon.

When Penguin found out, it went “ballistic,” Ms. Davenport wrote on her blog, accusing her of breaking her contractual promise to avoid competing with it. It wanted “Cannibal Nights” removed from sale and all mentions of it deleted from the Internet.

Ms. Davenport refused, so Penguin canceled her novel and is suing her to recover the advance.

“They’re trying to set an example: If you self-publish and distribute with Amazon, you do so at your own risk,” said Jan Constantine, a lawyer with the Authors Guild who has represented Ms. Davenport.

The writer knows her crime: “Sleeping with the enemy.” Penguin declined to comment.

If some writers are suffering collateral damage, others are benefiting from this new setup. Laurel Saville was locked out by the old system, when New York publishers were the gatekeepers. “I got lots and lots of praise but no takers,” said Ms. Saville, 48, a business writer who lives in Little Falls, N.Y.

Two years ago she decided to pay for the publication of her memoir about her mother’s descent from California beauty queen to street person to murder victim. She spent about $2,200, which yielded sales of 600 copies. Not horrible but far from earth-shaking.

Last fall, Ms. Saville paid $100 to be included in a Publishers Weekly list of self-published writers. The magazine ended up reviewing her memoir, giving it a mixed notice that nevertheless caught the attention of Amazon editors. They sent Ms. Saville an e-mail offering to republish the book. It got an editorial once-over, a new cover and a new title: “Unraveling Anne.” It will be published next month.

Ms. Saville did not get any money upfront, as she would have if a traditional publisher had picked up her memoir. In essence, Amazon has become her partner.

“I assume they want to make a lot of money off the book, which is encouraging to me,” said Ms. Saville, who negotiated her deal without an agent.

Her contract has a clause that forbids her from discussing the details, which is not traditional in publishing. The publicity plans for the book are also secret.

Can Amazon secretly create its own best sellers? “The Hangman’s Daughter” was an e-book hit. Amazon bought the rights to the historical novel by a first-time writer, Oliver Pötzsch, and had it translated from German. It has now sold 250,000 digital copies.

“The great and fascinating thing about Amazon’s publishing program is that there can be these grass-roots phenomena,” said Bruce Nichols of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, which republished the novel this summer.

Ms. Saville no longer even contemplates a career with a traditional publisher. “They had their shot,” she said. She is now writing a novel. “My hope is Amazon will think it’s wonderful and we’ll go happily off into the publishing sunset,” she said.

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From: Sr K10/18/2011 4:31:27 PM
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nytimes.com 

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From: zax10/22/2011 12:26:54 PM
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Will Amazon produce a Kindle phone?
by David Carnoy October 20, 2011 3:42 PM PDT

news.cnet.com 


A crude mock-up of a potential Kindle smartphone.

(Credit: David Carnoy/CBS Interactive)
Back in August of 2010, I wrote a column titled, " Will Amazon produce its own Android tablet?"

To give credit where credit was due, the article was a spin-off of a piece that the New York Times Bits blog did about Lab126, the division of Amazon behind the Kindle, located in Cupertino, Calif., not far from Apple. The article suggested that Amazon was looking into producing more hardware beyond the Kindle and I thought that a foray into the Android tablet market seemed likely, particularly considering it dovetailed nicely with Amazon's e-reader/e-book venture.

Well, it took a little while, but the Kindle Fire is finally here, just a few weeks from actually shipping. So now that we can check that one off, I thought it worth asking what's next for Amazon in the consumer electronics space.

Sure, there are rumors of a larger 10-inch tablet (perhaps Amazon could call it the Inferno or Blaze), which could arrive as soon as early next year. But beyond that, I'm thinking about something a little smaller, a Kindle smartphone. After all, now that Amazon's skinned Android once with the Fire, it can certainly do it for a device with a 4-inch instead of a 7-inch screen.

In fact, that New York Times article back in 2010 didn't mention an Android tablet but it did talk about a potential Amazon phone:

Lab126 briefly discussed entering the mobile phone market to compete with Apple and Google, but the project 'seemed out of Amazon's reach.' But the [anonymous source] person said Amazon had not definitively rejected the idea of building a phone in the future.

In recent weeks, there's been some chatter about Amazon possibly picking up Palm's beleaguered WebOS, which HP bought for $1.2 billion and promptly ran off a cliff in the backseat of its TouchPad tablet. I don't believe Amazon would buy WebOs to put into a phone but it makes slightly more sense for it to buy it for its patents, as some have suggested.

Why don't I think Amazon has any interest in owning its "own" OS for a phone? Well, because it's all about the apps, and Amazon already has its Appstore for Android with plenty of developers already creating Android apps. The big problem with WebOS was that Palm (and later HP) didn't have any developer support and I'm not convinced that Amazon is ready to spend millions to get developers to make apps for its platform like Microsoft is doing with Windows Phone 7.

It seems clear to me that Jeff Bezos and Amazon have a very clear mission going forward when designing future electronics products. As Jeff Bezos said multiple times during the launch of both the Fire and new e-ink Kindles, "We are building premium products and offering them at nonpremium prices." That's Amazon's new mantra, and I suspect a Kindle phone with a two-year contract would be free. Alternatively, Amazon could also come out with a new pricing model for service that undercuts current carrier pricing. But a partnership with a major carrier like AT&T (which supplies data for Kindle 3G models) would seem more likely.

When I spoke to Russ Grandinetti, Amazon's vice president of Kindle content, at the launch for the Kindle Fire, he had this to say when I asked him about whether Amazon saw the Fire competing with the iPad:

For four years now with the Kindle, what we've tried to do is build devices that get out of the way. We did that with books and people really loved it despite some skepticism. Now we're taking Amazon's media businesses--in music, in movies, and even Web services--and we've tried to pull those together into a device that consumers love. We always think that's a recipe for success and we think we have a real good chance with Kindle Fire.

In other words, Amazon sees these types of mobile devices as a means to an end and that end is users consuming Amazon's goods and services. What better than a sexy, cheap (maybe even free), user-friendly Kindle smartphone to continue driving consumers toward those same goods and services Grandinetti was talking about, not to mention the Amazon Appstore for Android.

How long before Amazon does a smartphone? That I can't tell you. But there are still a bunch of open positions over at Lab126 and most of them are geared toward creating and eventually producing new Amazon mobile devices.

Of course, any time you get cellular technology and carriers involved, things get much more complicated. But I think it's only a matter of time before you see a Kindle smartphone; ultimately, Jeff Bezos knows that his company is going to have to compete directly against the iPhone if he wants Amazon to be Apple--or even beat it.

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From: Sr K10/25/2011 10:30:25 PM
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A fair analysis of Amazon's Q3 and current Q4 has to include the costs of ramping up and operating the video streaming business, the damage done to Netflix and how that benefits Amazon, and the supporting role the streaming business has on selling Kindle Fire, offset so far by the very small current revenue from selling new Prime memberships.

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