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imageUh-oh. Sony’s Timebook Town is winding down efforts in Japan to deliver e-books to PCs and the Librie dedicated e-book reader, which in fact is no longer even made. Pity the people who spent good money on the Librie expecting that Sony would support it forever. Photo below is of Librie.

imageEven now, one never knows about the Amazon Kindle despite just-reported speculation from Goldman Sachs that Bezos and friends may have sold as many as 50,000 in the first quarter of 2008. Remember when the pundits thought that Rocket eBooks and Gemstars would go on and on forever. My own hardly infallible opinion? The Kindle will do fine as a niche product and maybe much more; and in fact, we could see the opposite danger—Amazon using the Kindle eventually to bully the book industry, and I don’t just mean the E part of it. Such is the danger of the ePub standard not catching on.

The good news: More focus on cellphones

Meanwhile there’s also good news from Japan. Sony’s new Publishing Link will focus on e-content for cellphones—the very medium that many in the States are dissing in favor of the Kindle. Hey, it’s a generation thing, and maybe a country-by-country thing as well. Middle-aged and elderly e-book pundits in some cases may be partial to the Kindle because it’s easier to read with aging eyes. Younger people may literally see matters, er, text, differently.

So might cash-strapped people in developing countries, for whom cellphones could be dirt-cheap e-book readers.

As for the Japanese, they just seem to go for small gadgets, especially the teenaged girls. Here’s to all kinds of platforms, rather than a Kindle-centric world! If young people in the States show a preference for cellphones over Kindles as e-readers, especially as pop-out displays improve, that could help address the Amazon-as-Standard-Oil risks.

(Sony item found via MobileRead.)

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