[access-uk] An interesting article on the BBC News Website.

  • From: Colin r. Howard <colin@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: r.harrington@xxxxxxxxx, talkingcomputers1@xxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Wed, 27 Jan 2010 13:06:30 +0000

Greetings,

Link was sent me by Dave Pardy, a fully sighted friend.

        http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8479967.stm

Text shows:


Blio bets against e-reader devices 
By Maggie Shiels 
Technology reporter, BBC News, Silicon Valley 


The Blio bookstore launches in February 
Software originally designed to help blind people read electronic books
could turn the emerging e-reader industry on its head, according to its
inventor. 
Futurist and artificial intelligence expert Ray Kurzweil, famed for
inventions like speech-recognition software, is the man behind Blio. 
His vision is to use free software to turn any device into an e-reader, from
a PC to a smartphone and from netbooks to tablet computers. 
"We will run on all platforms," said Mr Kurzweil 
"People don't want an extra piece of hardware. They want to take one device
and do everything with it and they want colour screens," said Mr Kurzweil. 
Blio is a joint venture between Kurzweil Technologies and the National
Federation of the Blind, which set up a company called knfbReading
Technology to create products for people with disabilities. 
'Future gazing'
Currently, the biggest player in the e-reader marketplace is the Kindle.
Online retailer Amazon, the firm behind the device, said that throughout
2009 it was the most popular present in its history. 
While Amazon does not provide specific figures, Forrester Research estimated
that it accounted for 60% of all e-readers sold in the US last year. Sony,
which offers a competing Reader device, accounts for 35%.

Blio's Peter Chapman says right now e-books are poor copies of paper books
In the coming year, some analysts have estimated that as many as 10m such
devices will be sold in North America. 
Blio has its sights set on claiming a chunk of those sales and also
disrupting the sector as a whole. 
"As a futurist, Ray is pretty good at predicting technology trends and Blio
is about re-writing the paradigm," Peter Chapman, executive of knfb told BBC
News. 
While many industry watchers agree that having one device that does
everything is key, a lot of credit for any future shift is already being
meted out to Apple and its expected announcement on Wednesday of a tablet
computer. 
Amazon's recent move to open up the Kindle to third party developers to
develop applications for its device is being seen as a reaction of Apple's
much touted product, rather than what Blio promises it can do. 
"Not only is Apple taking aim at their hot product, Apple is taking aim at
other offerings like games, music and books," JMP Securities analyst Sameet
Sinha told the Dow Jones. 
"They (Amazon) should be extremely worried." 
Disruption
One of Blio's main advantages over competitors, say analysts, is that the
software can offer a full colour experience. Most e-readers use E-Ink
technology, which is a black and white display. 
Blio can also preserves the original layout of a book, with typography and
illustrations copied across, as well as fonts and pagination.

The Kindle offers 400,000 books and 100+ papers and magazines
It also supports video and animation. There is text-to-speech and the
ability to write notes, highlight sections, and skip back to where you left
off across a number of devices. 
Purchased books will be stored in a personal virtual library. 
"The first generation of e-readers were really about straight text,"
explained Mr Chapman. 
"The second generation are just getting there - showing the entire page with
all its layout. The third generation is going to be beyond the paper into
the digital realm. 
"Our aim is to disrupt the e-reader business model and bring the best of the
web and bring the best of print together in one model," said Mr Chapman. 
However, analysts believe the rest of the industry will soon catch up. 
"We expect Amazon and other vendors will be looking for a viable display
technology to support colour content and perhaps video," said Susan
Kevorkian, programme director at technology researcher IDC. 
'Quantum leap'
Industry watchers are generally impressed by the Blio software but say its
success will rest on the store that is tied to it. 
"Their ability to scale with major publishers is going to be the issue going
forward," said Alan Weiner, research vice president of Gartner.

Blio offers textbooks, travel guides, art books magazines and best sellers 
"The business model is also interesting. They get a piece of revenue for the
content that is sold, which is a good model but requires a lot of volume to
work." 
Blio is backed by Baker and Taylor, the world's largest distributor of both
physical and digitised books. 
At the moment the software offers more than 1 million free books and
counting and 200,000 paid books. 
"Blio opens up the world of rich, graphic and full colour books that before
had no device that they could be read on," Bob Nelson executive vice
president of global business development for Baker and Taylor told BBC News.
"There are millions of those titles out there waiting to be converted to
digital media." 
It is this opportunity that that Mr Kurzweil hopes to build upon. 
"We have the key to transform the book industry," he said. 
Blio will be offered free and is expected to be available from February. 


SEE ALSO 
Bigger Amazon Kindle to go global 
06 Jan 10 |  Technology 
UK e-reader to challenge Kindle 
07 Jan 10 |  Technology 
Are we due a wave of book piracy? 
19 Oct 09 |  Magazine 
Are we ready to say bye to books? 
08 May 09 |  Northern Ireland 
Amazon unveils Kindle DX e-reader 
07 May 09 |  Technology 
Is the writing on the wall for paper? 
08 Sep 08 |  Technology 
Tech titans to unveil new toys 
05 Jan 10 |  Technology 
The rise and rise of e-readers 
07 May 09 |  Technology 
Microsoft shows off 'slate' PC 
07 Jan 10 |  Technology See link:

From Colin Howard who  lives near Southampton in 
Southern England.
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  • » [access-uk] An interesting article on the BBC News Website. - Colin r . Howard