Blog | News | Jobs
News centre
KnowledgeBANK
More from vnunet.com
ADVERTISEMENT

Microsoft to give away ebook Reader

Microsoft plans to provide its ebook Reader free to Windows users in a bid to push the technology into the mass market.

By John Geralds in Silicon Valley 09 Aug 2000

Microsoft plans to provide its ebook Reader free to Windows users in a bid to push the technology into the mass market.

The move coincides with the news that bookseller Barnes & Noble (B&N) has opened its online ebook store featuring the Microsoft technology. The retailer aims to make 2000 titles available for the ebook Reader with another 150 scheduled to be added every week.

Publishers Simon & Schuster, Time Warner Books and Random House also announced they would make their best-selling titles available in the Microsoft format at www.bn.com, the B&N website.

Microsoft Reader is designed to deliver on-screen computer text as an alternative way of reading books. The layout follows the style of a book and features electronic annotation tools. The technology has been shipping as part of Microsoft Pocket PCs since their launch in April.

Dick Brass, vice president for technology development at Microsoft, said: "This is a major milestone for the publishing industry and book lovers alike, offering anyone with a Windows-based computer the ability to easily experience the power of this new technology."

Although it will be available to consumers free of charge, publishers will be levied a small, per-copy, single-digit royalty, explained Brass.

As an initial incentive, B&N's online store will offer free downloads of 100 world classics including Charles Dickens's A Tale of Two Cities and Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter. Simon & Schuster will also provide titles from authors Stephen Ambrose, Jackie Collins and Jerry Stiller.

The online store will allow consumers to buy and download ebooks as well as electronically purchase titles which can subsequently be printed out at home.

Microsoft also announced an ebook piracy initiative together with the Association of American Publishers aimed at preventing ebook hacking and theft by combining encryption technologies with enforcement and education.

See also:

While still in its infancy the concept of ebooks is gaining popularity from major names in the literary and technology worlds.  16 Oct 2000
Microsoft has announced the latest flavour of Windows CE, designed for handheld PCs with keyboards.  07 Sep 2000
Amazon.com has selected Microsoft Reader as the preferred format for its future US e-book website in a deal that boosts the software giant's newly launched digital book technology.  29 Aug 2000
Book publishers get serious about making their publications available for download to PCs and handheld devices.  24 May 2000
Casio, Compaq, Hewlett Packard and Symbol have unveiled their latest handheld devices using Microsoft's Pocket PC software which looks set to challenge Palm Computing.  26 Apr 2000
Microsoft plans to include a talking book option in its MS Reader that will enable consumers to listen to as well as read titles in electronic form.  08 Jan 2000
Microsoft has renamed its next generation Windows CE-based palm sized PCs as Pocket PCs and said they will feature technology that enables consumers to carry around a library of books in their coat pockets.  07 Jan 2000
Microsoft and online bookstore barnesandnoble.com (bn.com) have kicked off the new century with an ambitious plan to rival paper-based books with electronic publications.  07 Jan 2000

All Developer

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
RELATED ARTICLES

Other websites