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image Whether CES is a book fair or not, there seems to be a good deal of e-book-related business going on there.

Here is yet another new entry into the e-book field: Copia, whose big idea is to cross e-books with social networking tools like Twitter and Facebook.

Not only can you share your books with your friends, you can apparently use the pre-existing social networks to do it. Copia will also be supporting other devices with its ePub distribution service.

Copia looks like a very interesting idea. Book sharing in other dedicated readers has always been an afterthought, and fairly limited. But it seems to be the whole reason for being of the Copia. I suspect the sharing will only work for non-DRMed books, though.

Meanwhile, Asus’s entry into the e-book biz is conspicuous by its absence. Asus has been rumored to be working on an Eee-branded e-book reading tablet, but neither this tablet nor the new smartbooks are on display at CES. Asus’s chairman said that deals with content providers are not in place yet, so showing the devices now would be premature.

But e-book readers are only one side of the e-book coin. The other side is the tablet PC, which combines the utility of a computer with the form-factor of a handheld and can run the same e-book reading software as keyboard-equipped devices.

During the Microsoft keynote, Steve Ballmer tried to steal Apple’s thunder by introducing a new Hewlett-Packard tablet computer running Windows 7. However, Techcrunch notes that HP is working on another, very similar tablet that runs Google’s Android. And Dell showed off a 5” Android tablet of its own.

 
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