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- Jun 4, 2012
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Waterstones and Amazon's Kindle turn a new chapter.
It was the twist no-one saw coming.
After previously describing Amazon as "a ruthless, money-making devil", Waterstones's managing director, James Daunt, announced in May that he was teaming up with the US internet store and would sell and promote its Kindle tablets and e-readers in the UK's premier book chain.
Few predicted a happy ending: "A deal for destruction", "Strange bedfellows", and "Waterstones let the fox into the chicken run" exclaimed some of the resulting headlines.
"If they choose to read digitally I have to become involved in that game," he explains, adding that it would be beyond the firm's resources to develop its own family of tablets and e-readers.
Instead he plans to offer add-on services - allowing visitors the chance to use Kindles to browse Waterstones's own recommendations and then read them for free while in-store.
"The principle is simple," he says.
"You are in a bookshop, you can pick up any of these books - you haven't bought them yet - you can browse them. Until you leave the shop you don't have to pay for them, and that same principle should apply to a physical device as well as a digital e-book."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-20046568
I can't quite get my head around this. Who on earth carries their kindle with them when they go shopping? And why would you bother to go all way to a Waterstone's store when you can browse the amazon kindle store from the comfort of your own sofa and already download samples of the books? The samples tend to be quite long as well, longer than I think most people read when browsing in a shop.
I went into my local Waterstone's today. Well over a third of the ground floor is taken up all the non-book things they sell and the kindle display they've installed is massive. A lot bigger than the old sony e-reader one. It's quite sad really.
I thought this would be interesting to share. I keep feeling like I should hate amazon because they've forced most independent bookshops out of business and they're going to be the end of Waterstone's as well but I can't hate them. I have stopped buying second-hand books from them though, I try to get those from the second-hand bookshops or charity shops in town.