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New Paperwhite with "Goodreads integration"
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I'm sporting a mark 1 Paperwhite and the screen is the best e-reader I've used (although I am told by a friend who has seen it that the Kobo Aura HD blows it out of the water. Have they released the tech specs of the new Paperwhite yet, ie. resolution, pixel density etc?

If not, I would be sorely tempted to update it and give my paperwhite to a friend.

Kindle MatchBook
COMING SOON—For thousands of qualifying books, your past, present, and future print-edition purchases will soon allow you to buy the Kindle edition for $2.99, $1.99, $0.99, or free.
that'd be AWESOME

Kindle MatchBook
COMING SOON—For thousands of qualifying books, your past, present, and future print-edition purchases will soon allow you to buy the Kindle edition for $2.99, $1..."
I received an email from Kindle Direct Publishing regarding that, asking authors to opt in.

Kindle MatchBook
COMING SOON—For thousands of qualifying books, your past, present, and future print-edition purchases will soon allow you to buy the Kindle edition for $2.99, $1..."
Yes, I've just signed up my book to that :) Basically, if you buy the printed edition, you can have the kindle edition for half price or less.


Kindle MatchBook
COMING SOON—For thousands of qualifying books, your past, present, and future print-edition purchases will soon allow you to buy the Kindle edition ..."
That'd be lovely. I bought like 90% of my books from Amazon before I got a Kindle and would love to have them on my Kindle.


For books, it's a purely promotional thing - buy the paperback and we'll give you a hefty discount off the ebook. It could be free, but there's no reason why it has to be. You can be pretty sure the trad publishers won't be free.
And like any promotional tool, it makes no sense to jump in on the lowest level - how are you going to do a "free Christmas special - gift one; keep one" or whatever if you start there. You're running into the sweet shop using your eyes for a stomach!

You've got a point, but the way I looked at it was from a purely personal perspective whereby I prefer to read physical books at home but use my Kindle when I'm out and about. Having both of them available from a single purchase would suit me no end. So although the economics behind Matchbook and Autorip might not marry up, the benefit to me as a listener or reader is pretty similar. My physical books are only available through Createspace anyway, so i doubt many people would take me up on the offer. But those that do buy a physical copy are paying a premium when compared to the Kindle version, so I thought that giving them a free "thank you" copy wouldn't exactly harm my sales.

I see this sort of thing a lot. While I obviously agree it's a nice deal, I'd point out that when DVDs were launched, I didn't really expect HMV to hand over a free, or even discounted, copy of Blade Runner just because I'd already bought the VHS from them a couple of years previously.

i have loads of films on my itunes now thanks to them coming free with the DVD. i approve.

..."
Again, I take your point but from a purely personal viewpoint my book has only been out for four months so I don't envisage this thing to eat into any sales as I doubt that those that buy the physical copy would also buy the ebook. Furthermore, paper and ebooks are likely to coexist for some time; DVDs killed off VHS more rapidly.

Again, because people will rip them anyway, so the studios are forced to give away "digital copies" (although people still rip them to get rid of the DRM).

But isn't that what I am doing now with my laptop?

I don't think I would though. My kindle is wifi only so I would only be connected to t'internet at home where my laptop is available & much better for typing replies like this.

I don't think I would though. My kindle is wifi only so I would only be connected to t'internet at home where my laptop is available &..."
I don't think groups will be available. Just shelves/books of friends

Given that the vast majority of indies ONLY write and produce ebooks, that could be utterly devastating for indie and SP writers. There is a danger that in years to come people will look back on 2013 and Matchbook as the thing that killed indie ebook publishing.

"Coming soon: Join over 20 million other readers and see what your friends are reading, share highlights, and rate the books you read with Goodreads on Kindle"
US prices: $119 Wifi and $189 3G, available 30 September.
No word on UK price or availability.