Looking to the future of e-readers

As this week’s revelation of Rupert Murdoch’s plot with Microsoft to remove his newspapers’ content from Google’s index arguably show, publishers are getting increasingly desperate in their attempts to make money from the web. As the digital chief of one large ad agency group told me this week: “There is no evidence from the last 10 years that ad-supported [online news] does work.”

No wonder, then, that many newspaper and magazine people go dewy-eyed at the mention of e-readers, which offer a clean sheet of (electronic) paper after the digital disasters of the past.

But while Amazon’s Kindle, the current market leader, offers many things that publishers like – not least a “walled garden” store that makes it hard to pirate e-books or read news for free on the open internet – it was designed for books, not recreating the experience of flicking through a magazine. No wonder some publishers are ganging together to explore alternatives, to create what some have called an “iTunes for magazines”.

Today’s FT Weekend Magazine – an innovation special, no less – explores the future for e-readers, from the perspective of publishers, manufacturers and consumers:

“We’ve known for more than a decade an e-reader product would offer the same satisfying product” as reading a newspaper, Arthur Sulzberger Jr, chairman and publisher of the New York Times, said earlier this year. “That dream continues to get closer to realisation.”

Alan Rusbridger, the Guardian editor who notoriously said in 2005 that his newspaper had probably bought its last printing presses, says such a device is needed “increasingly urgently” if newspapers are to survive.

Conveniently demonstrating the need for new e-reader innovations, the feature’s graphics and layout mean it looks better in print than online – but you can still read the full story here.

FT techfeed

Tech Blog

Analysis & reviews

About this blog Blog guide
Richard Waters, Chris Nuttall and April Dembosky in the FT's San Francisco bureau share their views - plus tech insights from Tim Bradshaw and Maija Palmer in London and Robin Kwong in Taipei.



Read about the authors


To comment, please register for free with FT.com and read our policy on submitting comments.

All posts are published in UK time.

Contact the FT Tech Hub team: richard.waters@ft.com, chris.nuttall@ft.com, april.dembosky@ft.com, maija.palmer@ft.com, robin.kwong@ft.com and tim.bradshaw@ft.com.

See the full list of FT blogs.

Archive

« Oct Dec »November 2009
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30  

Tech analysis and reviews

Coding for dummies

Execs learn geek techniques

Time for smartwatches?

Sony synchronises watches with smartphones

Tags

advertising android apple AT&T Electronic Arts Europe Facebook funding google hacking hewlett-packard HP htc instagram intel iPad iphone IPO Jawbone Lenovo London megaupload microsoft Mobile Netflix Nintendo nokia nokia lumia patents privacy samsung smartphones social media social networking Sony SOPA Spotify story of the week Tablets Toshiba twitter venture capital Wikipedia Yahoo Zynga