With Oprah’s endorsement, Kindle may go mainstream

Updated

Talk show host Oprah Winfrey is about to endorse the Kindle, Amazon’s ebook reader. After today, it will be a lot harder to argue that the Kindle is just a niche device for tech nerds — assuming Oprah fans actually buy the device.

Right now, the Amazon website features a video trailer for today’s show, in which Winfrey says she’ll reveal her “new favorite gadget.” In the course of the 30-second commercial, she also describes it as “life-changing, for me” and “the wave of the future.” Interestingly, the commercial doesn’t identify the Kindle specifically, but it’s not hard to connect the dots. Amazon has also sent out an email saying founder Jeff Bezos will be on the show to talk about the Kindle, according to the Financial Times.

There’s no doubt that the Kindle will get a boost because of the this. The question is, how big will the boost be, and will it last? At $359, the Kindle isn’t that cheap, and with the economy tumbling, Winfrey’s core audience may be less willing than, say, your average Silicon Valley techie to put a dent in their budget to buy a cool new gadget. During a recent earnings call, Bezos said Kindle customers continue buying the same amount of physical books, they just buy electronic books too. On the one hand, that’s good news for traditional publishing. On the other hand, if ebooks aren’t a replacement for physical books, then they’re just an additional expense.

Still, there’s no denying the growing indicators that reading ebooks is starting to become mainstream. I’ve written about the popular ebook reader for the iPhone called Stanza. It’s also worth noting that this week’s Apple featured app for the iPhone is a downloadable version of the Bone comic book. Paging through an electronic comic book isn’t as easy as reading a real comic, but it’s doable.

All in all, it’s looking like troglodytes like me, who thumb their noses at ebooks, will have to learn to adapt. Otherwise, I’ll just be that old guy muttering in the corner about the good old days.

Update: Looks like the endorsement is official. Also, Oprah viewers (or anyone else who uses the discount code “OPRAHWINFREY”) get $50 off the price for until Nov. 1.

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About the Author, Anthony Ha

Anthony is VentureBeat's assistant editor, as well as its reporter on enterprise technology, cloud computing, and tech policy. Before joining VentureBeat in 2008, Anthony worked at the Hollister Free Lance, where he won awards from the California Newspaper Publishers Association for breaking news coverage and writing. He attended Stanford University and now lives in San Francisco. Reach him at anthony@venturebeat.com. You can also follow Anthony on Twitter.

  • Alexis Morgan
    AHH....THE POWER OF OPRAH !
    Oprah is great. She plugged Obama when it mattered. She plugged the Power of Now, and my mother found new life (I mean that in a nice way) . And now she's plugging kindle, which is very good for the environment. Peronally, I read a lot of lengthy research reports, and can't stand to look at the screen that long, so I .... gasp... print them out. Bad, bad, bad. I know. So here's to Oprah and her good sense! And here's hoping she starts plugging greentech/cleantech projects in the coming months/years. In the interim, may I suggest checking out: http://www.greentechmedia.com/ The future is now.

    A Morgan
  • The Kindle is good for the environment if it actually reduces purchases of physical books, but the statistics that Jeff Bezos cites make it sound like that isn't happening. Unless I'm missing something ...
  • Chris
    I love my Kindle!! I know I'm supposed to hate the DRM, but as Oprah says, its a life changing device for me. I have 40 minute train commute each day, so I can shuffle between a couple of books during that time and never have to worry about having something to read. On vacation (or business travel), it was a godsend.

    I can easily say I read more (and better stuff since I'm cheap and project Guttenberg contains mostly classics) since getting the Kindle
  • Hey, that's good to hear. I've had a couple instances where people have actively mocked me for carrying a giant book around, so maybe I should think about switching over too ...
  • Yeah, the Kindle is great. Its hard to go back to books after you read on the Kindle.

    Not only is the Kindle interesting from the reading and publishing perspective, I also think its a great form factor. I could see this as a primary blogging device, with a few improvements.

    Wrote about it in more depth here:
    http://lifeinlists.com/2008/06/kindle-reshaping...
  • Huh, well I have used my iPhone to do minor edits and rewrites, so I suppose it's not impossible.
  • As an editor and writer who saw his first published story set in hot metal, I marvel at Amazon's Kindle reader and its role in the future of the "printed" word.

    I'm thrilled to see Oprah endorse Kindle!

    No traditional book can offer the interactive platform I've created for the Kindle edition of my novel Brazil or open the door to actively sharing the magic that goes into the making of a monumental novel.

    I've linked the e-text to an online guide with more than 200 images and illustrations, providing an indispensable companion on a fictional journey through five hundred years of Brazilian history. Plus my working notes and journals kept on a 20,000 kilometer trek through that vast land.

    You can preview the guide at my website: http://www.erroluys.com

    Were Gutenberg here to see the Kindle, he would have one word to say: "Bravo!"
  • edhardy622
    British law student sues Abercrombie-Fitch for disability discrimination.
    http://www.abercrombieonsale.co.uk