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Barnes & Noble Enters E-Reader Area With Nook

Barnes & Noble introduced the Nook e-reader, which may be the strongest competitor yet to Amazon’s Kindle.

The Nook includes features not offered on the Kindle, including dual screens, Wi-Fi, a book “lending” feature and an open format. The Nook also uses Google’s Android operating system, which is expected to lead to app downloads to the Nook in the future, said CEO of Barnesandnoble.com (BN.com) William Lynch.

Like the Kindle and new Sony and iRex devices that are due this holiday season, the $259 Nook offers free 3G wireless service for downloading books over the air.

The Nook will not be available to consumer electronics retailers. It will be sold through Barnes & Noble’s 700 storefronts and at www.nook.com.

The Nook has a 6-inch E-Ink screen typical of other e-readers, but it also adds a color capacitive 3.5-inch LCD touchscreen just below it, letting users browse by swiping a finger across book cover art. Soft control buttons and a soft keyboard are also included. The Alex e-reader, with a similar dual-screen platform, was just announced by Spring Design, which said it is working with publishers and bookstores, one of whom may offer Alex by the end of the year.

The Nook’s Android platform could allow access to gaming and other apps, said Lynch, who noted, “It’s not lost on us there will be a lot of development on Android, so we could take games and who knows what and get it on this device.”

Among the Nook’s advantages over the Kindle is a book-lending feature called “LendMe” that allows a user to email an e-book, as a loan for up to 14 days, to a friend via PC, Mac or smartphone, using Barnes & Noble software. During that period, the Nook owner has no access to that e-book.

Another unique feature is Wi-Fi access when visiting a Barnes & Noble store to permit full browsing of e-books at BN.com. Users can scroll through an entire e-book as one would browse through printed books, and users might also receive promotions such as a free download of the first chapter of a new book.

Also unlike the Kindle, the Nook has a MicroSD card slot to expand its onboard 2GB of memory with an additional 16GB for storing up to 17,000 books.

While the Kindle uses a closed, proprietary e-book format, the Nook joins Sony, iRex and other e-reader suppliers in supporting the open EPUB format as well as PDF files.

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