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Large Kindle DX Display and New Features Provide Enhanced Experience for Reading a Wide
Range of Professional and Personal Documents
The New York Times, The Boston Globe, and The Washington Post to Launch Trials Offering Kindle
DX to Subscribers Who Live in Areas Where Home Delivery is Not Available
Leading Textbook Publishers to Offer Textbooks in Kindle Store
Five Universities to Launch Trials with Students Using Kindle DX in Fall 2009
SEATTLE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May. 6, 2009-- Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) today introduced Amazon Kindle DX, the new
purpose-built reading device that offers Kindle’s revolutionary wireless delivery and massive
selection of content with a large 9.7-inch electronic paper display, built-in PDF reader,
auto-rotate capability, and storage for up to 3,500 books. More than 275,000 books are now
available in the Kindle Store, including 107 of 112
current New York Times Best Sellers. New York TimesBestsellers and New Releases
are $9.99 unless marked otherwise. Top U.S. and international magazines
and newspapers plus more than 1,500 blogs are also available. Kindle DX is available for pre-order
starting today for $489 at
http://amazon.com/kindleDX and will ship this
summer.
“Personal and professional documents look so good on the big Kindle DX display that you’ll find
yourself changing ink-toner cartridges less often,” said Jeff Bezos, Amazon.com Founder and CEO. “Cookbooks, computer
books, and textbooks – anything highly formatted – also shine on the Kindle DX. Carry all your
documents and your whole library in one slender package.”
New Large Display
Kindle DX’s display has 2.5 times the surface area of Kindle’s 6-inch display. The larger
electronic paper display with 16 shades of gray has more area for graphic-rich content such as
professional and personal documents, newspapers and magazines, and textbooks. Kindle reads like
printed words on paper because the screen works using real ink and doesn’t use a backlight,
eliminating the eyestrain and glare associated with other electronic displays.
The New York Times Company and Washington
Post Company are launching pilots with Kindle DX
this summer. The New York Times, The Boston Globe, and The Washington Post will offer the Kindle DX at a reduced price to readers who
live in areas where home-delivery is not available and who sign up for a long-term subscription to
the Kindle edition of the newspapers.
“At The New York Times Company we are always seeking new ways for our millions of readers to
have full and continuing access to our high-quality news and information,” said Arthur Sulzberger, Jr., chairman, The New York Times Company and publisher, The New York Times. "The wireless delivery and new value-added
features of the Kindle DX will provide our large, loyal audience, no matter where they live, with
an exciting new way to interact with The New
York Times and The Boston Globe. Additionally, by offering a
subscription through the Kindle DX to readers who live outside of our delivery areas, we will
extend our reach to our loyal readers who will be able to more readily enjoy their favorite
newspapers. Meanwhile, we are continuing to work with Amazon to make The New
York Times and The Boston Globe experiences on Kindle better than ever."
Kindle DX’s large display offers an enhanced reading experience with another category of
graphic-rich content—textbooks. With complex images, tables, charts, graphs, and equations,
textbooks look best on a large display. Leading textbook publishers Cengage
Learning, Pearson, and Wiley, together representing more than 60 percent of the
U.S. higher education textbook market, will begin offering textbooks through the Kindle Store beginning this summer. Textbooks under the following
brands will be available: Addison-Wesley, Allyn & Bacon, Benjamin Cummings, Longman & Prentice Hall (Pearson); Wadsworth, Brooks/Cole, Course Technology, Delmar,
Heinle, Schirmer, South-Western (Cengage); and Wiley Higher Education.
Arizona State University, Case Western Reserve
University, Princeton University, Reed College, andDarden School of Business at the University of Virginia will launch trial programs to make Kindle DX devices available
to students this fall. The schools will distribute hundreds of Kindle DX devices to students spread
across a broad range of academic disciplines. In addition to reading on a considerably larger
screen, students will be able to take advantage of popular Kindle features such as the ability to
take notes and highlight, search across their library, look up words in a built-in dictionary, and
carry all of their books in a lightweight device.
“The Kindle DX holds enormous potential to influence the way students learn,”
said Barbara R. Snyder, president
of Case Western Reserve University. “We look
forward to seeing how the device affects the participation of both students and faculty in
the educational experience.”
New Built-In PDF Reader
Kindle DX features a built-in PDF reader using Adobe Reader Mobile technology for reading
professional and personal documents. Like other types of documents on Kindle, customers simply
email their PDF format documents to their Kindle email address or move them over using a USB
connection. With a larger display and built-in PDF reader, Kindle DX customers can read
professional and personal documents with more complex layouts without scrolling, panning, or
zooming, and without re-flowing, which destroys the original structure of the document. Everything
from annual reports with graphs to flight manuals with maps to musical scores can be viewed on a
single, crisp screen with Kindle DX.
New Auto-Rotation
Kindle DX’s display content auto-rotates so users can read in portrait or landscape mode, or
flip the device to read with either hand. Simply turn Kindle DX and immediately see full-width
landscape views of maps, graphs, tables, images, and Web pages.
New 3.3 GB Memory Holds Up To 3,500 Books
With 3.3 GB of available memory, Kindle DX can hold up to 3,500 books, compared with 1,500 with
Kindle. And because Amazon automatically backs up a copy of every Kindle book purchased, customers
can wirelessly re-download titles from their library at any time.
Incredibly Thin
Kindle DX is just over a third of an inch thin, which is thinner than most magazines.
3G Wireless, No PC, No Hunting for Wi-Fi Hot Spots
Just like Kindle, Kindle DX customers automatically take advantage of Amazon Whispernet to
wirelessly shop the Kindle Store, download or
receive new content in less than 60 seconds, and read from their library—all without a PC, Wi-Fi
hot spot, or syncing. Amazon still pays for the wireless connectivity on Kindle DX so books can be
downloaded in less than 60 seconds—with no monthly fees, data plans, or service contracts.
Syncs With Kindle for iPhone and other Kindle Compatible Devices
Just like Kindle, Kindle DX uses Amazon Whispersync technology to automatically sync content
across Kindle, Kindle DX, Kindle for iPhone, and other devices in the future. With Whispersync,
customers can easily move from device to device and never lose their place in their reading.
Massive Selection of Books—Plus Newspapers, Magazines, and Blogs
The Kindle Store currently offers more than
275,000 books, including popular books like New
York Times Bestsellers, New Releases, and
fiction and nonfiction released in the past several years. Dozens of newspapers and magazines are
also available for subscription or single-edition purchase.BusinessWeek and The
New England Journal of Medicine are available
in the Kindle Store starting today, and The Economist will be available soon. Subscriptions are auto-delivered
wirelessly to Kindle overnight so that the latest edition is waiting for customers when they wake
up. Over 1,500 blogs are available on Kindle and updated and downloaded wirelessly throughout the
day.
Kindle DX includes all the other features Kindle customers enjoy every day, including:
- Wirelessly send, receive, and read personal documents in a
variety of formats such as Microsoft Word and PDF
- Look up words instantly using the built-in 250,000 word New
Oxford American Dictionary
- Choose from six text sizes
- Add bookmarks, notes, and highlights
- Text-to-speech technology that converts words on a page to
spoken word
- Search Web, Wikipedia.org, Kindle Store, and your library of purchased
content
- No setup required—Kindle comes ready to use—no software to
load or set up
Amazon Kindle is sold through Amazon Digital
Services, Inc.
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About Amazon.com
Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN), a Fortune 500
company based in Seattle, opened on the World Wide
Web in July 1995 and today offers Earth's Biggest Selection. Amazon.com, Inc. seeks to be Earth's most customer-centric company, where
customers can find and discover anything they might want to buy online, and endeavors to offer its
customers the lowest possible prices. Amazon.comand
other sellers offer millions of unique new, refurbished and used items in categories such as Books;
Movies, Music & Games; Digital Downloads; Electronics & Computers; Home & Garden; Toys,
Kids & Baby; Grocery; Apparel; Shoes & Jewelry; Health & Beauty; Sports & Outdoors;
and Tools, Auto & Industrial.
Amazon Web Services provides Amazon’s developer customers with access to in-the-cloud
infrastructure services based on Amazon's own back-end technology platform, which developers can
use to enable virtually any type of business. Examples of the services offered by Amazon Web
Services are Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2), Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3),
Amazon SimpleDB, Amazon Simple Queue Service (Amazon SQS), Amazon Flexible Payments Service (Amazon
FPS), Amazon Mechanical Turk and Amazon CloudFront.
Amazon and its affiliates operate websites, including
www.amazon.com,
www.amazon.co.uk,
www.amazon.de,
www.amazon.co.jp,
www.amazon.fr,
www.amazon.ca, and
www.amazon.cn.
As used herein, “Amazon.com,” “we,” “our” and similar terms include Amazon.com, Inc., and its subsidiaries, unless the context
indicates otherwise.
Forward-Looking Statements
This announcement contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the
Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Actual results may
differ significantly from management's expectations. These forward-looking statements involve risks
and uncertainties that include, among others, risks related to competition, management of growth,
new products, services and technologies, potential fluctuations in operating results, international
expansion, outcomes of legal proceedings and claims, fulfillment center optimization, seasonality,
commercial agreements, acquisitions and strategic transactions, foreign exchange rates, system
interruption, inventory, government regulation and taxation, payments and fraud. More information
about factors that potentially could affect Amazon.com's financial results is included inAmazon.com's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its most recent
Annual Report on Form 10-K and subsequent filings.
Source: Amazon.com, Inc.
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