The publishing world is going digital, and there's no
turning back.
If you thought e-books were a big deal today, you ain't
seen nothin' yet.
Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN) can hardly keep up
with the demand for its Kindle e-reader, and
Sony (NYSE: SNE) has a
spiffy readerout on shelves, too. Then there's the
good-looking
Barnes & Noble (NYSE: BKS) device. And
thanks to
book-scanning foolslike
Google (Nasdaq: GOOG), there's no shortage of
free and paid content availableto consume.
But as impressive -- or intimidating, if you make a living
from selling dead trees -- as that sounds, it's just the
first few drops of a
coming torrent. For example, chip designer
Marvell (Nasdaq: MRVL) just announced a
partnership with
E Ink that has already borne a new processor.
The system-on-a-chip, dubbed Armada 166E, can connect to an
abundance of wireless communications channels like
Wi-Fishort-range and
3Glong-range signals, render detailed documents, and then
display them on low-power E Ink screens used by many
eReaders.
The first wave of Armada-powered readers will come from
relatively unknown companies like Plastic Logic, Spring
Design, and enTourage Systems. But down the line, this chip
could become very important to Marvell's bottom line.
The Armada supports novel display sizes and could show
content like "periodicals, larger-format books, and
documents" the way they were meant to be seen. Marvell has
designed Armada to run
Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Windows Mobile
software, as well as various flavors of Linux and even the
Google Androidmobile operating system.
This software-agnostic approach gives Marvell's customers
-- the gadget designers -- freedom to use the tools they know
best, and that are best for the task at hand. It's a low-cost
solution for highly portable devices -- a killer combo that
puts high-quality technology in comfortable reach for a much
larger customer base than today's classy but pricey readers
do. And Marvell can't be the only chip designer aiming for
this promising new market.
Market researcher iSuppli says that 1.1 million e-readers
crossed retail counters last year, and expects the market to
grow to 18 million units in 2012. And it looks like those
near-ubiquitous e-readers will make today's first-generation
beasts look quaintly outdated, too.
The ink-on-paper dinosaur will never die entirely -- but
it's an obsolete technology that will soon be relegated to an
increasingly lessened importance within the publishing
industry. As a
wannabe
author, this sea change both
scares and excites me. Now let's see how Barnes &
Noble and
Borders (NYSE: BGP) adapt to the new digital
landscape. The time to act is now.
This article was originally published as
Digital Publishing Is Still Wearing Diaperson
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