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Maybe a textbook case for innovation

Will Amazon's new Kindle boost e-readership with the promise of a larger screen, loose-leaf size and flexibility? Some may be skeptical, but the device could bring innovation to the textbook industry. Janet Babin reports.

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Steve Chiotakis: Digital book readers have helped reignite the printed . . . typed word. And Amazon’s got a new one coming out for newspapers and textbooks that publishers hope will do the same.
From the Innovations Desk at North Carolina Public Radio, here’s Marketplace’s Janet Babin.


Janet Babin: You can read newspapers and magazines on most e-readers now, but the small screens can make it difficult. The new, bigger Kindle is expected to be loose-leaf sized and could be bendable.

No matter how many bells and whistles, though, blogger Om Malik with GigaOm says e-readers won’t halt sagging newspaper and magazine subscriptions. But he says academic journals and textbook publishers could get a boost from a larger digital reader:

Om Malik: I remember carrying around like a four-pound chemistry book. I mean if there was something like a Kindle, life would have been great.

The current Kindle costs about $370. That would make it an expensive gadget for many students.

Amazon won’t comment on the new Kindle, but the company has planned a news conference for Wednesday.

I’m Janet Babin for Marketplace.

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