The Paper Trail

New Kindle E-Reader Enters Textbook Market

May 7, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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Tech geeks are buzzing about Amazon's new Kindle DX, a wide-format electronic book reader that will launch this summer. But colleges and universities also have a newfound stake in its future, as Amazon works to bring content from publishers who control around 60 percent of the textbook market to the E-reader, Inside Higher Ed reports.

According to Amazon officials, the new Kindle will offer textbooks from three major publishers, Cengage Learning, Pearson, and Wiley, this summer. E-textbooks are not necessarily new, but these partnerships might be game-changing in the latent E-textbook market.

Amazon will run pilot programs at six institutions—Arizona State, Case Western Reserve, Pace University, Princeton, Reed College, and the University of Virginia's Darden School of Business. School officials hope the Kindle, which will cost $489, might eventually defray textbook costs and also reduce the amount of paper (in textbooks or printed course packs) used per student.

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Arizona State University,
colleges,
business school,
Princeton,
University of Virginia

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I HAVE GRANDCHILDREN HAULING 45LB BOOK BAGS AND GOING TO THE DR FOR THE PAIN THAT FOLLOWS.

CAN A PARENT APPLY FOR THE TARP MONEY TO OFFSET THE COST OF THE KINDLE?

ANN of OH 8:06PM August 06, 2011

I'm a technology teacher at a Private K - 8 School. I'm interested in finding a source (and cost) for digital textbooks. My thought is to replace textbooks with Kindles or Nooks for the Middle School students. It would be the most cost effective way to utilize my textbook and technology budgets. I'm running into difficulty finding digital books.

Nancy Yauneridge of SC 2:17PM February 14, 2011

I like going to boarder. At one location I notice Kindle on display. I did not think anything of it. Know on Amazon I have done some research about this new gadget that I might give it a try. I have several friends who used them and say it great and they do not have to carries any books. I am a college student. Buying books each quarter is very costly. Last quarter I experienced a class without book by downloading the text. It was great. I did not have the need for paper, and ink. I will invest in Kindle for my next quarter. College books are costly. I like to keep my books for references.

Joyce Thigpen of IL 12:32PM January 16, 2010

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