It’s Time to Free Your E-Reading From Amazon

Kindle competition is coming soon

Matt Stephens
OneZero

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Photo: NurPhoto/Getty Images

TThe Kindle has hardly changed in almost a decade. Sure, it’s had some incremental improvements — slightly nicer e-ink screen, waterproofing, OS tweaks, removal of all physical buttons — but the basic unit is much the same as it has been for years.

Amazon dominates the e-reader industry, so it can afford to be complacent, or so the company might think. PocketBook and Kobo create some competition, but no other devices are a real threat yet.

Kindle’s rivals compete by exploring new directions (front-lit screens, smaller versions such as the short-lived Mini, “warm light” amber LEDs, and more), while Amazon waits to see which features customers like before deciding whether to adopt the innovations themselves. (I’m not knocking Amazon for this; it’s a solid risk-averse business strategy.)

But despite its dominance and willingness to adopt any feature that proves successful with a competitor, Kindle has a glaring drawback: It’s strictly a walled garden. If you have a Kindle, you’re locked into Amazon’s e-books ecosystem. The Paperwhite does have a web browser, but the software is so clunky that you might as well not.

I know that people love their Kindle devices, and they really are nice for reading. But stagnation in…

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