Thanks for the link, I wasn't aware of this ebook reader, I'll be sure pass it along to my colleagues. Just last night,
my employer had a launch party of sorts for our system of linking ebook readers, publishers, libraries, device makers, etc.
One question I have about the B&N device is if it's going to be a closed sales terminal which only allows you to buy from B&N, or if you'll be able to use it to access many eBook providers...
BTW, a large portion our 1.6 million digitized books are freely available in ePub format, and we demoed d/l'ing a book straight to a Kindle, Sony eBook-reader, OLPC, etc from a variety of sources: our site, library, and a commercial vendor.
And lastly, and in a spirit of "social justice" (I can already hear the CEsspool exploding), people who are print-disabled--primarily the blind and severely dyslexic--have a special exemption in the monopoly granted by US copyright law. Those certified as print-disabled, which is an onerous process, are granted free access to digitized copies of published works regardless of copyrights. So, last night we did pat ourselves on the back over making over 1,000,000 digitized books available to the print-disabled in one fell swoop; easily
quadrupling the number made available by publishers in the last 50 years. And all these books are marked up in a format to be downloaded directly into the bookreader devices used by the print-disabled community.
Alright...I'll get off my soapbox now.