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image Amazon will almost surely keep using E Ink in Kindles in the near future.

But mightn’t Amazon also flirt with rival display technology—perhaps Pixel Qi, perhaps Qualcomm’s mirasol tech—in the coming year or so? No inside information here. It just makes sense.

The 5.7-inch mirasol display to the left is a mockup. But the real one will be along in late 2010 if all goes as planned. Significantly, mirasol actually sips less power than E Ink does, and Pixel Qi offers a low-power E Ink-style mode as well as a thirstier color mode or modes.

Here are more reasons for Amazon to consider mirasol, Pixel Qi or rivals:

1. Color’s strategic importance if Amazon wants to hold the interest of newspapers and magazines, which, of course, are busy setting up rival distribution systems. How effective are black-and-white ads compared to color? And yet really good color E Ink isn’t exactly coming next month (though it’s some kind of color units may show up in late 2010). By contrast, Pixel Qi is already in production.

2. Amazon’s video-on-demand operation. Even now, Amazon is competing somewhat against Netflix despite different business models (Amazon doesn’t offer a Netflix-style flat-rate plan). Might Amazon want to raise the stakes with a device that could display both e-books and movies?  Alas, with full-motion video, E Ink’s power requirements can be nasty.

3. The company’s recent efforts in the educational market. Whether for anatomy textbooks or to hold the interest of young children, color rocks.

4. People’s continuing interest in the Kindle for uses beyond e-reading. I use my Kindle to check on Gmail and write short messages (in the “Experimental” Browser mode), but E Ink is s-l-o-w. By contrast, a Pixel Qi display is just as fast as an LCD, which in fact it is. And, being suitable for video, mirasol is also a speed demon.

5. Many consumers’ unhappiness with E Ink’s current inability to give us good contrast between text and background.

Even Kindle Review, one of the most gung-ho K-boosters, has discovered the possibilities of Pixel Qi—perhaps nudged along by the fact that the first hardware company with a firm commitment to the technology is Notion Ink, which will market an e-book-friendly tablet.

Simply put, Jeff Bezos, no fool, would be stupid to maintain an E Ink-only approach when many consumers will want alternatives.

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