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The U.S. ereader market is heating up with a planned revamp by a major player,
Sony.
The Japanese consumer electronics giant is planning to launch an upgraded Sony Reader, which will be priced at $180 to $300, “probably” in August, according to
Bloomberg. The device, designed to compete with Amazon’s Kindle, will hit the market before Sony’s tablet PCs, which are scheduled to go on sale later this year. Sony plans to incorporate its ebook technology into the
two Android-based tablets, code-named S1 and S2.
Update: A Sony rep says the Bloomberg story is inaccurate. “We have not released any pricing, timing or features of a new Sony Reader,” the Sony rep says.
An upgraded Sony Reader would vie with the current category leader, Amazon’s
Kindle, but also with Barnes & Noble’s
Nook and the iriver Story HD, the first ereader to use Google’s eBooks platform, which
goes on sale at Target this week. All those devices retail for $139.
In addition, Barnes & Noble has two tiers of ereaders, including the
Simple Touch and its
Nook Color, which has the functionality of a tablet PC. Amazon is also
reported to be working on a tablet PC, which should hit the market sometime before October.
Image courtesy of Flickr, Ian Muttoo
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