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image News Corporation gets only $6-%6.50 of the %15 that Kindle subscribers pay for the Wall Street Journal each month, and News CEO Rupert Murdoch is POed. He’s looking forward to “half a dozen readers” in time, with deals possible for them—presumably with Murdoch’s people enjoying full access to subscriber information. Perhaps two dozen or so companies are already selling readers, and B&N and Sony will be going wireless very shortly.

“The Kindle is a fantastic invention for books,” various news accounts quote him, “but it’s not much of an experience for newspapers.”

So what do you think, gang? Certainly a color screen would help both readers and advertisers, and a fairer revenue split at Amazon would help the news business and many a book publisher.

I myself use my Netbook for newspaper reading, for free, though I would gladly pay for a mix of archival access and a really good Time-style reader if the costs wee reasonable and the subscription applied to many publications. Ahead is PixelQi technology, which many a netbook could start using to make them function as e-readers. In Murdoch’s place I would focus a bit less on devices and a bit more on content and presentation on a variety of machines.

 
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