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  • Joy Covey, Amazon’s First CFO, Dies In Bike Accident

    Joy Covey, Amazon’s First CFO, Dies In Bike Accident

    Joy Covey, a big part in the success of Amazon’s business, has died at the age of 50. She was riding her bike in San Francisco when it happened. She was an entrepreneur and contributed to Amazon’s massive expansion, becoming their first CFO. She has been described as a self-made woman, tech entrepreneur, and intellectual powerhouse. She has a long history of working in the tech sector and got there using her intellect and highly driven work ethic.

    Covey joined Amazon as its CFO in 1996, after already working as the CFO for the digital-audio start-up called Digidesign, according to CNET. Covey has quite the success story after dropping out of high school and leaving home when she was only 15. Shortly after that, she decided to go to college at the age of 17. She graduated in two and a half years from Fresno State and then went on to Harvard in order to get dual Law and MBA degrees.

    Covey was named one of Fortune Magazine’s 50 Most Powerful Business Women during her time working for Amazon. She was very profitable in her time as the CFO and Fortune even described her greatest feat as convincing Wall Street that a profitless company was worth $22 billion. Amazon’s business is constantly growing and even features their own television shows and streaming services, as of recently.

    At the time of her death, Covey was working as the treasurer for the National Resources Defense Council. After leaving Amazon, she was a deeply committed environmentalist and helped form the Beagle Foundation, which funded a two year fellowship with the NRDC for Harvard Law School graduates. Frances Beinecke, the president of the NRDC spoke very highly of Covey’s work, saying “Her adventurous and indomitable spirit was infectious and she constantly challenged us to reach greater heights.” It is no surprise, being the environmentalist that she is, that she was riding her bike when she died.

    The accident happened in San Francisco and the San Francisco Chronicle reports that she was riding northbound around 1:30 p.m. on Wednesday when a Southbound Mazda minivan turned left onto Elk Hill Road, forcing a head-on collision, that resulted in Covey losing her life shortly after. The driver wad a 22 year old male. Art Montiel, the California Highway Patrol Officer that was on the scene said “She was wearing a helmet, but the injuries were too severe.” She was pronounced dead on the scene and there was nothing that the paramedics could do.

    She was very helpful to both organizations that she worked for and she will be forever missed by friends and family. Covey leaves behind her son Tyler, who is eight years old.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KUkhdjf32-8

    Image via Youtube

  • Early Amazon CFO Joy Covey Dies In Bicycle Collision With Minivan

    Early Amazon CFO Joy Covey Dies In Bicycle Collision With Minivan

    Former Amazon CFO Joy Covey has reportedly died in a bicycle accident on Skyline Boulevard in San Mateo County.

    CBS SF Bay Area reported that the accident occurred as the result of a collision with a white Mazda MPV minivan that turned in front of the bicycle, without naming the victim.

    PandoDaily reports that people close to the Covey family confirmed that it was Joy, who is survived by her eight-year old son.

    According to the CBS report, she had been wearing a helmet. The driver was a 22-year old male. Covey was 50.

    Covey worked at Amazon from 1996 to 2000. She is credited with being instrumental in the company’s success in its early days. She was its first CFO, and was there when the company went public in 1997. More recently, Covey had reportedly been serving as treasurer of the National Resources Defense Council.

    All Things D’s Kara Swisher fondly remembers interviewing her back in the mid-nineties before becoming good friends with her. Swisher writes:

    Joy was tough, but fair, and she always had an interesting insight to the Internet scene, cutting right through the awful and endless logrolling and posturing in the tech world to get to the actual point. She was also a wonderful mother, and a good friend to many in the tech community, including myself.

    ..

    Mostly, she was a person of substance, of heart, of grit and of much-needed humor. Joy did not just tell it like it was — she lived it like it was, too.

    Swisher shares the old interview here.

    Image: Joy Covey (Facebook)

  • Amazon’s ‘Alpha House’ Adds Cynthia Nixon, Amy Sedaris, and Wanda Sykes

    Amazon’s new original series Alpha House has just added a handful of notable names to its cast. The company announced that Cynthia Nixon (Sex and the City), Amy Sedaris (Strangers with Candy), comedian Wanda Sykes, and Julie White will join the show, which is set to premiere this fall.

    The show was one of five original series greenlit by Amazon back in May, following a trial period that featured 14 pilots from Amazon Studios. Viewer feedback played a key role in which shows got the go-ahead, and the others to make the cut included Betas, Annebots, Creative Galaxy, and Tumbleaf. Alpha House stars John Goodman and was written by Doonesbury‘s Garry Trudeau. It centers on four U.S. Senators who live together in a rented house in Washington D.C. The pilot episode is available to watch, for free, on Amazon Instant Video.

    From Amazon:

    Alpha House follows four Republican senators-turned-housemates, Gil John Biggs (John Goodman), Robert Bettencourt (Clark Johnson), Louis Laffer (Matt Malloy) and, Andy Guzman (Mark Consuelos) through re-election battles, looming indictments, parties and housemate drama. Nixon will play Senator Carly Armiston, the formidable, confident, Democratic senator from New York . She is joined by Sedaris, who will play Louise Laffer, the sweet, concerned wife of Senator Louis Laffer. Sykes will play Senator Rosalyn DuPeche, a strong-willed, funny Democrat who just happens to be a neighbor of the male senators, while White will play the tough, determined, yet charming southern wife to Goodman’s character Gil John Biggs.

    “We’re lucky enough to have four of the most talented performers around joining the show,” said Trudeau.

    With its original programming, Amazon seems to be bucking the trend that Netflix has set – debuting all of the episodes in one big chunk.

    “It hasn’t been entirely determined how they’ll put it out. But it will be a different model than the one used by Netflix,” says the show’s producer, Jonathan Alter.

    Image via Amazon

  • Amazonian Butterflies Flock to Turtle Tears for Salt

    Nature never fails to amaze. Currently attracting attention are butterflies of the Amazon that are sipping up the tears of Yellow-spotted Side-necked turtles (Podocnemis unifilus). Experts believe the attraction to the tears is to the salt contained therein. Sodium is a mineral that is hard to come by in the western Amazon, according to Phil Torres, affiliated with Rice University and the Tambopata Research Center, Peru.

    Turtles ingest sodium through a primarily carnivorous diet, but the same is not true for herbivores, “They end up needing this extra mineral source,” says Torres in an interview with LiveScience. Butterflies have other sources of sodium they rely on as well: animal urine, puddles, sweaty clothes and people.

    Torres says that the activity appears to have little impact on the turtles though it may increase the risk of attracting other predators or obstructing their vision of oncoming threats. Geoff Gallice, graduate student of entomology at the Florida Museum of Natural History, agrees, “the butterflies are taking so little… They simply uptake salt through a process similar to absorption by placing the proboscis on the salt-laden (tears) and passively feed.” In fact, the turtles seem loathe to budge from their sunny spots as the butterflies alight on their shells and noses.

    Torres has also witnessed bees in the same activity, drinking turtle tears, though the turtles are not as tolerant of the bees (as shown in the video). Torres suspects it is the buzzing of the wings to which they object.

    Butterflies drinking turtle tears

    This phenomenon seems to be particular to the region, other researchers report to LiveScience that they have not observed the butterfly-turtle relationship in much of the Americas. The western Amazon lacks in sodium because it is over 1,000 miles from what would be the primary source of salt, the Atlantic Ocean, and the Andes Mountains restrict it from mineral particles that would be blown in by the wind.

    The Tambopata Research Center is located in the remote reaches of the Amazon, only accessible by boat on the Tambopata River. The Tambopata National Reserve covers 700,000 hectares and is a headquarters for researching and exploring Amazonian nature, wildlife and habitats.

    [Image and Video via Jeff Cremer, Perunature.com]

  • Amazon Announces A New Kindle Paperwhite

    The Kindle Fire may be Amazon’s major focus these days, but the retailer hasn’t forgotten its incredibly successful line of e-readers. In fact, it announced a brand new Kindle last year with the Paperwhite, and the retailer decided today that it was in need of an upgrade.

    Amazon announced today a brand new Kindle Paperwhite featuring a number of upgrades from last year’s model. The original Paperwhite set itself apart with a better display and a built-in backlight that made reading for hours on end even easier than on previous models. Now the defining features of last year’s Paperwhite are being made even better.

    “Kindle is the best-selling e-reader in the world for six years running,” said Jeff Bezos, Amazon.com Founder and CEO. “No one is investing on behalf of readers or pushing the boundaries of hardware, software and content for readers like this team: the new Kindle Paperwhite has brand-new display technology, the next generation of our built-in light, a faster processor, plus all of the exclusive benefits of the Kindle ecosystem like Kindle MatchBook, Kindle Owners’ Lending Library, over 400,000 exclusive titles, Goodreads, Kindle Singles, Kindle Worlds, Kindle FreeTime, and much more.”

    According to Amazon, here’s all the new features coming along with the new Kindle Paperwhite:

  • New display technology with higher contrast—Kindle Paperwhite’s display is the most advanced e-reader display ever constructed. Higher contrast and better reflectivity means whites are whiter and blacks are blacker, so the pages are virtually indistinguishable from a physical book. You won’t find this level of contrast with any other e-reader display.
  • Next generation built-in light—Guides light toward the surface of the display so you can read comfortably without eyestrain.
  • New, 25% faster processor—Books open and pages turn faster for a seamless reading experience.
  • New touch technology—19% tighter touch grid makes Kindle Paperwhite respond even more accurately to the smallest touches.
  • New Kindle Page Flip—Skim page-by-page, scan by chapter, or skip to the end of your book, all without losing your place. For example, it’s now easy to quickly flip back and forth to that map of Beyond the Wall in A Dance With Dragons.
  • New Goodreads Integration—Combines the world’s largest e-reading community and the world’s largest community of book lovers. 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, available exclusively from Amazon.
  • New Kindle FreeTime—Built-in parental controls have been extended to give parents a simple, engaging way to encourage kids to spend more time reading. Hand-select books for your kids to read, and hand out achievement badges when they hit reading milestones. A progress report keeps parents updated on total time spent reading, number of words looked up, badges earned and books finished.
  • New Vocabulary Builder—Compiles words you look up in the dictionary into an easy-to-access list. Use these lists to quiz yourself with flashcards and instantly see words in context.
  • New Smart Lookup—Integrates a full dictionary definition with other reference information about a word, character, topic or book via X-Ray and Wikipedia. For example, using an ordinary dictionary to look up “credit default swaps” in Michael Lewis’ The Big Short would give the individual definitions of “credit,” “default” and “swaps.” Smart Lookup recognizes this is an important topic and phrase in the book, and gives you the correct definition of “credit default swaps” via X-Ray.
  • New In-line Footnotes—With a single tap, read the complete text of each footnote in-line without changing the page or losing your place in the book.
  • New Kindle MatchBook—New benefit lets customers purchase Kindle editions of print books purchased from Amazon—past, present and future—for $2.99 or less.
  • All the above features will be available at launch, except for Goodreads and FreeTime integration. Both will be delivered via a free update at a later date.

    So, when will you be able to get your hands on the new Kindle Paperwhite? The Amazon pre-order page lists it as having a launch date of September 30, and it’s available for $119 if you’re fine with having ads displayed on the home screen when you’re not reading. For an extra $20, you can get a Kindle Paperwhite without the ads.

    [Image: Amazon]

  • Amazon’s Kindle MatchBook Is AutoRip For Books

    Early this year, Amazon announced a new service called AutoRip that would give customers the mp3 version of any physical album bought through the retailer. It was only a matter of time before a similar initiative came to its book selling services, and that time is now.

    Amazon announced today a new service called Kindle MatchBook that allows customers who buy a physical book through Amazon to receive the Kindle edition for free or for a reduced price. To be more specific, the Kindle Editions will run you either $2.99, $1.99 or $0.99. It’s also retroactive so any physical book you purchased from Amazon since 1995 will now be available to you in a cheap, digital format.

    “If you logged onto your CompuServe account during the Clinton administration and bought a book like Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus from Amazon, Kindle MatchBook now makes it possible for that purchase—18 years later—to be added to your Kindle library at a very low cost,” said Russ Grandinetti, Vice President of Kindle Content. “In addition to being a great new benefit for customers, this is an easy choice for publishers and authors who will now be able to earn more from each book they publish.”

    But wait, there’s a catch, isn’t there? Unfortunately, the world of book licensing is a depressing world filled with greedy publishers who would love to charge you the full price twice for both the physical and digital versions of a novel. Amazon hopes this service will change their tune, however, as the retailer is calling on authors and publishers to embrace MatchBook.

    “I love this idea. It’s simple, brilliant, and good for everybody,” said best-selling author Marcus Sakey. “I love to have print books on my shelf, but I love reading my Kindle on the go, and there are plenty of titles I’d like both ways. It’s ridiculous to ask readers to pay full retail twice for the same book.”

    Starting out, Amazon announced that some top notch authors will have their books included as part of MatchBook’s launch, including Ray Bradbury, Michael Crichton, Blake Couch, James Rollins and others. The retailer also notes that any book published through Amazon Publishing will be automatically enrolled in MatchBook.

    Kindle MatchBook will launch at some point in October. Until then, check out Amazon’s landing page for the service to see a small selection of the books that will be made available at launch.

    [Image: Amazon]

  • Amazon Appstore Celebrates One Year In The EU With Free Apps

    One year ago today, the Amazon Appstore officially launched in the EU. It brought with it all the advantages of Amazon’s Android storefront, including the Free App of the Day, to European owners of Android and Kindle Fire devices. Now the company wants to give a little something back to all of its customers.

    Amazon announced today that some of the most popular apps on the Amazon Appstore will be going free today in celebration of the one year anniversary of the Appstore launching in Europe. The offer isn’t just exclusive to Europe either as any country that has access to the Amazon Appstore will be able to get the free apps.

    That means Amazon Appstore users in the U.S., Canada, UK, Germany, France, Spain, Italy and Japan will be able to download the following apps today for free:

  • Jamie’s 20 Minute Meals
  • Drawing Pad
  • Angry Birds (Ad-Free)
  • PAC-MAN HD (Kindle Tablet Edition)
  • World of Goo
  • Shazam Encore
  • SwiftKey
  • Calengoo
  • Sprinkle
  • Paper Camera
  • A lot of these apps and games have already been bought millions of times over the past few years, but it’s a good opportunity for those just joining the Android or Kindle Fire parties to get some excellent apps for free. Personally, I recommend Pac-Man HD, SwiftKey and Paper Camera. All are really cool apps that are almost impossible to pass up now that they’re free.

    Alongside the sale, Amazon is also running its usual Free App of the Day promotion. For today only, you can grab the excellent Cut the Rope for free. It’s playable on your Android and Kindle Fire devices.

    [Image: Amazon Appstore]

  • Amazon And Hulu Have New Original Shows In The Works

    Amazon And Hulu Have New Original Shows In The Works

    While Netflix has received a lot of attention for its original shows throughout the year (including fourteen Emmy nominations and a much talked-about speech from Kevin Spacey last week), don’t forget, it’s online streaming competitors are gearing up to offer more original content as well.

    Two of those competitors – Amazon and Hulu – both have new projects in the news today.

    Amazon announced that it is greenlighting a pilot for a new original children’s series called Maker Shack Agency, which is being produced by Electus Studios. Here’s how Amazon describes it:

    Maker Shack Agency follows the exploits of 13-year-old inventor Angus Wolfe, aka “Wolfie,” and his two best friends and fellow “makers,” Jo and Merle, in the hardscrabble town of Akron, Ohio. These three teenage thinkers and tinkerers use all the branches of science and personal ingenuity to solve their client’s problems by making a new invention every episode. Together, they make people’s lives better by coming up with science and technology-inspired inventions for their various problems.

    Deadline reports that Hulu and Lionsgate have teamed up on a thirty-minute comedy series called Deadbeat. It comes from co-creators Cody Heller and Brett Konner, as well as Lionsgate TV and Brad Pitt’s Plan B Entertainment. Hulu reportedly ordered ten episodes, and it will debut next year on both Hulu and Hulu Plus.

    Deadbeat is apparently about a medium who helps ghosts settle unfinished business.

    Image: Amazon Studios

  • Amazon’s Mobile Associates API Brings Retail Shopping To Your Mobile App

    Amazon’s Mobile Associates API Brings Retail Shopping To Your Mobile App

    Amazon is the world’s largest online retailer and it sells just about everything. It’s also host to one of the world’s largest mobile platforms with its Kindle Fire devices and Amazon Appstore for Android. Now the retailer is combining the two.

    Amazon announced today the launch of the Mobile Associates API. It’s a new tool that allows developers to integrate Amazon’s retail store into their mobile apps. In other words, a developer could sell physical items via in-app purchases, and the sale of those physical items would be handled by Amazon’s retail operation.

    “Developers now have the ability to create an even deeper connection between their app and the products customers value and purchase through Amazon.com,” said Mike George, Vice President of Amazon Appstore, Games and Cloud Drive. “Imagine a developer of a nutrition and fitness app can now offer their customers the ability to purchase vitamins, supplements and fitness gear within the app, directly from Amazon.com. It offers the customer a more relevant experience and provides the developer with a new source of revenue.”

    It’s noted that the API can do more than just sell physical items in apps. It can also be used to bundle digital and physical purchases. Amazon uses the example of a person buying a board game and receiving the digital version of the same board game for free.

    The API is also being used by mobile games that are tied into popular brands, like Marvel. Animoca, developer of Thor: Lord of Storms, integrated the API so that users could purchase Thor toys from within the app and earn in-app currency for doing so. This also nets the developer a sales commission from Amazon.

    In short, the Mobile Associates API is a pretty big deal. Amazon is the only mobile platform holder that could do this, and I’m surprised it took the company this long to integrate its retail operation into its mobile operation.

    If you’re a developer and find yourself interested in the Mobile Associates API, you can learn more about it here. The API isn’t exclusive to the Amazon Appstore either as any Google Play app can integrate it as well.

    [Image: AmazonAppDistro/YouTube]

  • The Implications Of Bezos’ Purchase Of The Washington Post

    As you’ve more than likely learned by now, Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos is buying The Washington Post for $250 million. The news was announced Monday afternoon, and the Internet (at least the business end of it) just about exploded with excitement, skepticism and other reaction in general.

    Can tech mogul Bezos reinvent the newspaper? Let us know in the comments.

    Just in case it hasn’t been made immediately clear by whichever source you first learned the news from, Amazon is not buying The Washington Post, but rather Bezos is himself, and reportedly only for less than 1% of his personal net worth, no less.

    Bezos wrote a letter to Washington Post employees, which has been published at WashingtonPost.com. He begins by noting that he understands the news will be greeted with “a degree of apprehension,” and that “it is only natural to worry about change.”

    “So, let me start with something critical,” Bezos says. “The values of The Post do not need changing. The paper’s duty will remain to its readers and not to the private interests of its owners. We will continue to follow the truth wherever it leads, and we’ll work hard not to make mistakes. When we do, we will own up to them quickly and completely.”

    He notes that he will not be leading the company day-to-day, and that the Post already has “an excellent leadership team” that is staying on. It was noted in the initial announcement that publisher and CEO Katharine Weymouth, president and GM Stephen P. Hills, executive editor Martin Baron and editorial page editor Fred Hiatt would continue in their respective roles.

    “There will, of course, be change at The Post over the coming years,” Bezos continues. “That’s essential and would have happened with or without new ownership. The Internet is transforming almost every element of the news business: shortening news cycles, eroding long-reliable revenue sources, and enabling new kinds of competition, some of which bear little or no news-gathering costs. There is no map, and charting a path ahead will not be easy. We will need to invent, which means we will need to experiment. Our touchstone will be readers, understanding what they care about – government, local leaders, restaurant openings, scout troops, businesses, charities, governors, sports – and working backwards from there. I’m excited and optimistic about the opportunity for invention.”

    “Journalism plays a critical role in a free society, and The Washington Post — as the hometown paper of the capital city of the United States — is especially important,” he adds. “I would highlight two kinds of courage the Grahams have shown as owners that I hope to channel. The first is the courage to say wait, be sure, slow down, get another source. Real people and their reputations, livelihoods and families are at stake. The second is the courage to say follow the story, no matter the cost. While I hope no one ever threatens to put one of my body parts through a wringer, if they do, thanks to Mrs. Graham’s example, I’ll be ready.”

    Donald Graham, CEO and Chairman of The Washington Post Company, also put out a letter about the sale. In that, he says, “Our revenues had declined seven years in a row. We had innovated, and to my critical eye our innovations had been quite successful in audience and in quality, but they hadn’t made up for the revenue decline. Our answer had to be cost cuts, and we knew there was a limit to that. We were certain the paper would survive under our ownership, but we wanted it to do more than that. We wanted it to succeed.”

    Weymouth put out a letter as well, referring to Bezos as “one of America’s great innovators and most respected business leaders.”

    “The Washington Post has earned a worldwide reputation for tough, penetrating, insightful, and indispensable journalism. With the investment by Mr. Bezos, that tradition will continue,” Weymouth says.

    “While he expects The Post to remain profitable, his focus is on the essential role that our journalism has on dialogue and the flow of information in our society,” she says. “Mr. Bezos knows as well as anyone the opportunities that come with revolutionary technology when we understand how to make the most of it. Under his ownership and with his management savvy, we will be able to accelerate the pace and quality of innovation.”

    To many, the news of the deal came as a pretty big surprise, but as Quartz points out, there were signs that it was coming. They give three of them: Bezos sold roughly $185 million in Amazon shares on Friday, Bezos is friends with Graham, and he “love running unprofitable businesses.”

    Okay, that last one might be a bit of a stretch, but writer Tim Fernholz does have a point when he says, “At Amazon, Bezos has focused on market-share and customer satisfaction, often at the expense of his margins. Nonetheless, markets have continued to reward his disinterest in their metrics, sending Amazon’s stock soaring above $300 despite the company’s $7 million in losses last quarter.”

    And it’s not as though Bezos hasn’t shown an interest in the news industry in the past. He did, after all, invest in Business Insider, which has quickly become a major web publication since expanding beyond its original Silicon Alley Insider model.

    The investment came in April, when BI CEO Henry Blodget had this to say in an email to staff about the $5 million investment (which wasn’t all from Bezos, but also included some financing from other investors):

    This capital will allow us to continue to invest aggressively in many areas of the business, including editorial, tech/product, sales and marketing, subscriptions, and events. As we mentioned last night, it will also allow us to expand our office.

    Jeff’s investment grew out of a dinner he and I had about a year ago. We talked about the business, and he was excited about it. (He sees some parallels with Amazon). A few months later, he expressed an interest in investing. My reaction was basically “Hell, yeah!”

    Naturally, Blodget had some thoughts about Bezos’ purchase of The Washington Post as well. He notes that having Bezos as an investor has been great, then speculates about why he might have bought the Post:

    First, I’d guess that Jeff Bezos thinks that owning the Washington Post will be fun, interesting, and cool. And my guess is that, if that is all it ever turns out to be, Jeff Bezos will be fine with that. This is a man who invests in rockets and atomic clocks, after all. He doesn’t necessarily make these investments for the money. Or bragging rights. Or strategic synergies.

    Second, I’d guess that Jeff Bezos thinks that there are some similarities between the digital news business and his business (ecommerce) that no one in the news business has really capitalized on yet.

    After listing some specific similarities, he suggests that the Washington Post business could be complementary to Amazon in that Amazon already produces content, is in the subscription and media-gadget businesses, and is getting into local deliveries. Also, in the sense that news might sometimes encourage people to buy things.

    Some have suggested that Bezos’ purchase of the newspaper business is something of a charity case. You know, like he has a lot of money, and feels that he has some kind of duty to contribute to the saving of journalism.

    Washington Post reporter Lydia DePillis doesn’t see it that way. She writes, “First of all, don’t be deceived by the fact that Bezos is buying it himself, rather than Amazon–there’s little reason to believe this is a passion project. It just would’ve been tricky to make it a public takeover, because corporations don’t know how to value a newspaper’s future earnings. And besides, though the markets have been remarkably patient with Amazon’s continued losses, a money pit like the Post would’ve been harder to stomach.”

    She notes that while $250 million may not seem like a lot compared to some other acquisitions, it’s a lot for “a company with a lot of liabilities,” noting that the Boston Globe just sold for $70 million.

    She speculates that the Post’s site will get a big redesign, and “could become a major new sales and advertising platform”. She also suggests that Bezos can obtain a lot of data from owning a new service, among other things.

    Despite Bezos buying the business on his own, rather than as Amazon, plenty are still expecting there to be some Amazon connections. Whether or not these occur remains to be see.

    Search Engine Land’s founding editor Danny Sullivan made an interesting comment on Twitter: “The once inconceivable idea Google would buy [The] New York Times took [a] giant leap toward reality with Amazon-Wash Post deal.”

    This stems from comments Google executives allegedly made a few years back. Here’s what Eric Schmidt said back then:

    “We had a series of conversations about what to do about content, and we ultimately decided to not to get into the content business. We looked at the New York Times but also other institutions. Rather than naming them, let’s just say we did a survey. And our conclusion was we are not very good at [content].

    “We like information, but we think it’s better for those to be managed the professionals that are managing them well. I’m careful not to ever rule out anything, because that’s a mistake as a CEO. But I would tell you it’s highly unlikely we would get into the content business.

    “It’s fundamentally better for us to be the supplier of platforms and monetization and revenue and advertising and subscription services to all of these players. We desperately need the newspapers, the magazines, the media companies to be successful because we need their content.

    “The thing we can offer is better monetization, better targeting and a better user experience viewing content created by very, very sophisticated people. … If it’s content, where you have people producing content that viewers are looking at, we’re better off powering it, not writing it and owning it.”

    Of course, a great deal of time has passed, and Google has already had to start putting money toward news publications in some cases. Who knows what’s possible? Some of us would just like to see Google News get actual news right in terms of when it was published.

    In addition to The Washington Post, Bezos will get the Express newspaper, The Gazette Newspapers, Southern Maryland Newspapers, Fairfax County Times, El Tiempo Latino and Greater Washington Publishing. He will not, however, get Slate, TheRoot.com or Foreign Policy, which will all remain part of The Washington Post Company.

    The WaPo Labs and SocialCode businesses, the company’s interest in Classified Ventures and certain real estate assets like the headquarters in Washington D.C. will also remain with the company.

    The Washington Post Company will be changing its name in light of the deal, but what that name will be has yet to be determined. The deal is expected to close later this year.

    What do you think about Bezos buying The Washington Post? Do you think it will remain completely separate from Amazon? Do you think the move is good for the newspaper? For the industry in general? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Image: James Duncan Davidson (Flickr)

  • This Year’s Tablet War Will Begin in September

    As shown by nearly every analyst’s estimates, tablet shipments slowed during the second quarter of 2013. It turns out, though, that this past quarter was the calm before the storm, with this September slated to be, quite possibly, the biggest month in tablet computing history.

    Google has already launched the refresh of its Nexus 7 tablet, getting out ahead of the competition. According to a DigiTimes report, Amazon is also readying a new lineup of Kindle Fire tablets, to be released in September. The report’s unnamed sources “from the upstream supply chain” also predict that Intel and Google will wade even further into the tablet market with new tablets and “2-in-1 devices.” Intel has scheduled an event on September 15.

    While the Android manufacturers fight it out for market share, Apple will also be releasing its new iPad and iPad mini device this fall. The tech company is holding an event on September 10, and is expected to at least reveal, if not release, its new iPads on that day.

    Beyond the third and holiday quarters of 2013, some interesting things are on the horizon for the tablet market. Wearable computing is expected to become a large segment, meaning companion apps for tablets are likely. Both Apple and Samsung are also rumored to be working pioneering the mega-tablet market – tablets with screens larger than one foot.

    (Image courtesy PC Today Thailand)

    (via DigiTimes)

  • Amazon Options New Sci-Fi Thriller “Orbit”

    Amazon Options New Sci-Fi Thriller “Orbit”

    Aliens are coming to Earth. The fate of the world depends on a small band of people who must fight the battle of their lives. At least, that’s what the first draft says anyway.

    Amazon has optioned a new science-fiction thriller about an alien invasion called “Orbit.” Bruce Guido, the project’s writer, says he’s now working on the first draft. He reports his efforts are simply a labor of “love.”

    “Orbit emerged out my love for the alien invasion genre, a genre which I have adored my entire life. When it comes to what may happen if aliens wander into our neighborhood, the possibilities are infinite.”

    Guido says his new project centers around a band of workers orbiting the Earth. From a distance, the group witnesses as aliens try to take over the world by force. Powerless and afraid, the salvage crew must figure out how to intercede in time before all is lost. He says what makes his sci-fi story a little different from the more run-of-the-mill features is all a matter of perspective.

    “As I was looking at a photo of Earth, sitting lonely against a sea of black, it just hit me — what if the story was told outside of Earth? … What if we experienced worldwide destruction from the point of view of characters that are isolated, watching from the outside? What would it be like to see our home, our loved ones, everyone we’ve ever known, annihilated from a distance with us powerless to stop it?”

    Guido has had a bit of prior success with his unique vision before. “Third Shift,” a story about a depressed vampire, who works at a convenience store, won him honorable mention at the 2010 Los Angeles Reel Film Festival. Amazon says they anticipate great things from the up-and-coming filmmaker.

    “While it’s a contained story involving only a handful of characters, the scope and stakes of the movie are enormous. This is a movie about the end of the world, but it’s played out entirely with a cast of six people.”

  • Amazon Developing an Android Video Game Console [RUMOR]

    The success of video games on mobile devices has begun to drastically affect the video game industry. Free-to-play game pricing has begun to invade both PC gaming and console gaming, and nearly every large game publisher is now putting out games for iOS and Android. The success of the Ouya Kickstarter has shown that there is some demand for more casual Android games on a larger screen.

    Now, it appears that Amazon is looking to enter the video game console market. Game Informer is reporting that Amazon is developing an Android video game console. According to the report’s unnamed people “who have knowledge of the in-development hardware,” the console will be released by the end of 2011 – perhaps as soon as Black Friday. A newly designed controller is also rumored to be in development.

    Amazon has reportedly been gathering veteran game developer talent into its Amazon Game Studios team for months. The studio was announced late last year, and it has already released more than one game, including the mobile game Air Patriots..

    Though the Ouya Kickstarter campaign was wildly successful, reviews of the console have been lukewarm, largely due to the lack of exclusive games for the device. If Amazon is able to launch its console with a variety of great original games, then the company’s already established base of Kindle Fire gamers, the incredible marketing power of the Amazon home page, and a price far lower than Sony’s or Microsoft’s new consoles could make an Amazon gaming console a real player in the gaming industry.

    (via Game Informer)

  • Jeff Bezos Buying The Washington Post Gets The NMA Treatment

    Earlier this week, it was revealed that Amazon founder Jeff Bezos had bought The Washington Post for $250 million. The ramifications of the purchase have yet to be felt, but Bezos claims that business will continue as usual at the prestigious newspaper.

    Our favorite Taiwanese animators have a different take on the whole affair. They see the purchase as just the latest in a string of old, rich guys buying up newspapers as collector’s items, and that the sale of the Post must have previous owner Katherine Graham spinning in her grave.

    They do make the astute observation that Bezos is the first Silicon Valley billionaire to buy a newspaper. Is it a trend that will increase as more newspapers around the country bleed more money? Going online may help these newspapers regain profitability and the Silicon Valley types could help lead them through the transition.

    For now, we’ll have to see if Bezos and the current management team at the Post can lead it to profitability once again. If it’s successful, we might just see more acquisitions like it.

  • Amazon Appstore Now Accepting HTML5 App Submissions

    Do you go native or HTML5? It’s a question that’s becoming increasingly harder to answer as HTML5 flourishes into a mature platform. There are still a lot of advantages to going native, but HTML5 requires you build an app only once and it works across a number of devices. You can now add the Kindle Fire to those devices.

    Amazon announced today that it’s now accepting submissions of HTML5 apps and mobile optimized Web sites. These apps will be sold alongside native apps on the Amazon Appstore for both Kindle Fire and the Amazon Appstore for Android.

    To start, Amazon has opened up a new section on its developer portal called Amazon Web App Resources. The Web site not only includes the tools needed to monetize your Web apps, but it also includes what it calls the Web App Tester. This tool will allow you to test your app to make sure it runs smoothly on both the Kindle Fire and Android devices. You can grab it for free here.

    Of course, all of this wouldn’t be possible without updates to the Kindle Fire in the form of a new Web runtime based on Google’s Chromium project. This allows for GPU accelerated graphics performance in HTML5 apps so that your Web apps will have nearly native performance. You can read up on the new Web runtime here.

    So, how easy is it to submit a Web app? Amazon says you just need to sign in to the Amazon Mobile App Distribution Portal, go to My Apps and choose “Submit a New Web App.” It’s a simple as that, but you can check out some more information here if you need help.

  • Amazon Art Launches As a New Fine Art Marketplace

    Amazon Art Launches As a New Fine Art Marketplace

    Amazon has partnered with a bunch of fine art galleries and dealers to sell quality art via a new portal – Amazon Art.

    According to the company, Amazon Art will showcase over 40,000 works from more than 4,500 artists. These works of art will be sourced from over 150 galleries and dealers, including Paddle8, Holden Luntz and McLoughlin Gallery. This selection will make Amazon Art launch as one of the largest online collections of original artwork directly sourced from galleries and dealers.

    “We are excited to bring one of the largest selections of fine art direct from galleries to our customers. Amazon Art gives galleries a way to bring their passion and expertise about the artists they represent to our millions of customers,” said Peter Faricy, VP of the Amazon Marketplace. “We’re thrilled to bring the excitement and emotional connection of art to our customers.”

    The type of artwork offered in the new marketplace is quite varied – from the hundred-dollar pieces to Monet classics that go for $1.5 million.

    Customers seeking access to high quality, gallery selection can now explore a wide variety of fine art on Amazon. The Amazon Art store demystifies the world of art and allows every customer the chance to enjoy a gallery experience. From Folk Art to Impressionism to Modern Art, Amazon Art features a broad selection to suit any customer, from the experienced collector to a first-time art buyer. Customers can browse unique works of art, including photographs from Clifford Ross starting at $200, popular fine art like Andy Warhol’s “Sachiko” for $45,000, historic artwork from Claude Monet including, “L’Enfant a la tasse, portrait de Jean Monet” for $1.45 million and works from iconic artists such as Norman Rockwell’s “Willie Gillis: Package from Home” for $4.85 million.

    Amazon Art mostly features artwork from galleries in the U.S., but also from those in the U.K., the Netherlands, and Canada.

    Like all of the other Amazon subspecialty marketplaces (like sports memorabilia and such), Amazon Art is browseable by artist, subject, style, price, and more.

  • Jeff Bezos Is Buying The Washington Post

    The Washington Post Company just announced that Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos is buying its publishing business, including The Washington Post newspaper for $250 million.

    I bet you didn’t see that coming.

    To be clear, Bezos is buying it. Not Amazon. It will not become an Amazon property.

    “Everyone at the Post Company and everyone in our family has always been proud of The Washington Post — of the newspaper we publish and of the people who write and produce it,” said Donald E. Graham, Chairman and CEO of The Washington Post Company. “I, along with Katharine Weymouth and our board of directors, decided to sell only after years of familiar newspaper-industry challenges made us wonder if there might be another owner who would be better for the Post (after a transaction that would be in the best interest of our shareholders). Jeff Bezos’ proven technology and business genius, his long-term approach and his personal decency make him a uniquely good new owner for the Post.”

    “I understand the critical role the Post plays in Washington, DC and our nation, and the Post’s values will not change,” said Mr. Bezos. “Our duty to readers will continue to be the heart of the Post, and I am very optimistic about the future.”

    Bezos wants publisher and CEO Katharine Weymouth and president and GM Stephen P. Hills, executive editor Martin Baron and editorial page editor Fred Hiatt to continue in their respective roles. Apparently they have agreed.

    “With Mr. Bezos as our owner, this is the beginning of an exciting new era,” said Weymouth. “I am honored to continue as CEO and Publisher. I have asked the entire senior management team at all of the businesses being sold to continue in their roles as well.”

    In addition to The Washington Post, Bezos will get the Express newspaper, The Gazette Newspapers, Southern Maryland Newspapers, Fairfax County Times, El Tiempo Latino and Greater Washington Publishing. He will not, however, get Slate, TheRoot.com or Foreign Policy, which will all remain part of The Washington Post Company.

    The WaPo Labs and SocialCode businesses, the company’s interest in Classified Ventures and certain real estate assets like the headquarters in Washington D.C. will also remain with the company.

    The Washington Post Company will be changing its name in light of the deal, but what that name will be has yet to be determined. The deal is expected to close later this year.

  • Amazon Gets Emmy Nod For Instant Video Technology

    Netflix got a lot of attention when three of its original shows earned a total of fourteen Emmy nominations, but it turns out that its competitor in online video is also getting some Emmy recognition.

    No, Amazon isn’t up for any awards for Outstanding Drama Series or anything like that. Rather, the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences will recognize Amazon Instant Video with a 2013 Technology & Engineering Award for its work on personalized recommendation engines for video discovery, Amazon announced today.

    “Our goal is to give customers the best possible movie and TV watching experience. That means both enabling customers to find exactly what they’re looking for and helping them discover new TV shows and movies in a personalized way,” said Bill Carr, VP of Music and Video for Amazon. “We’ve made it effortless to discover new content they’ll love, and we will continue to innovate on behalf of our customers to make it even easier and more enjoyable to explore all of the great movies and TV shows on Amazon.”

    This is the first time Amazon has won such an award, though Amazon has been known for its recommendation technology for years. Amazon Instant Video is getting the award for its development of tools and algorithms that let customers easily find and discover videos that cater to their specific tastes and preferences, Amazon says.

    One feature of Amazon Instant Video’s personalization and recommendations include Video Finder, which lets users find relevant movies and TV shows through classifications such as “Dystopian,” “Love,” “Zombies,” and “Revenge,” to name a few examples. These are ordered by users’ unique viewing habits and likes.

    The engine also utilizes genre-based recommendations (determined by viewing history and favorite categories), the “customers who watched this also watched” feature and of course the “Your Store” feature, which gives personalized recommendations based on tastes and preferences.

    LIke Netflix, Amazon is cranking up its original content output (It just greenlit five new pilots this week). Perhaps Amazon will be even more in the Emmy conversation like its rival Netflix when awards season rolls around next year.

  • Amazon Kicks Off a Round of Pilots with 5 New Kids Shows

    Back in April, Amazon debuted 14 new pilots – a mix of kids shows and adult shows. They opened up all the pilots for users to watch, for free, in order to provide feedback on which pilots should be developed into full-fledged series.

    At the end of that experiment, Amazon came out of it with 5 greenlit shows – two adult shows (Alpha House and Betas) and three kids shows (Annebots, Creative Galaxy, Tumbleleaf). They’re set to air later this year, and possibly in earl 2014.

    Today, Amazon Studios is beginning a round 2 of sorts – maybe a round 1.5. They’ve greenlit 5 new kids show pilots and once again, they’re seeking viewer input to determine which pilots land a full series run.

    “We’re very excited to be able to introduce these five original ideas and their talented creators to Amazon customers. After the success of our first pilots, we look forward to getting lots more fantastic feedback from kids and parents,” said Roy Price, Director of Amazon Studios. “For the first time we are offering live-action and animated programming for older children and continuing with entertaining, educational programming for preschool aged children – it’s going to be a lot of fun.”

    The 5 new pilots are directed at children aged 6 to 11, and are being developed by both Emmy Award-winners and relative newcomers.

    First, Gortimer Gibbon’s Life on Normal Street is a live-action show that tracks the lives of “three quirky tweens.” Next, Grid Smasher mixes puppetry and CGI to tell the story of aliens competing in a galactic game. Then we have Hard-Boiled Eggheads, an animated comedy about special agents tracking down monsters and mutants. There’s the Jo B. & G. Raff Show, a show for preschoolers. Finally, we have Wishenpoof!, from the creator of Blue’s Clues. It’s about a young girl with magical powers.

    Amazon has sure been focusing on the kids lately. This move to launch 5 new kids show pilots comes less than two months after Amazon signed a big deal with Viacom to add tons of kids programming to Prime Instant Video.

  • Amazon and Overstock.com Start New Battle in Book Price War

    Amazon has slashed the prices on a bunch of hardcover books in what appears to be a response to a recent promotion from Overstock.com to undersell the online retail giant on hundreds of thousands of titles.

    Over the weekend, Amazon quietly boosted the discounts on many hardcovers in an attempt to match prices offered by Overstock during their promotional period. Some titles are being offered at 50% and even up to 65% off – much higher than the 40%-50% range that we’re used to seeing with Amazon.

    “We’re having a great year and want to thank our loyal customers for making it happen,” said CEO Patrick Byrne. “For a limited time, we’ve priced our books at least 10-percent below Amazon.com’s prices, as of July 22, 2013. This move immediately affects hundreds of thousands of titles. As usual, if the final order is over $50, the whole thing will ship for free. Otherwise shipping is just $2.95 per order,” announced Overstock late last week.

    The promotion was supposed to run for just one week, but Overstock says that it will run for longer. Just how much longer is unknown at this time.

    You can see Amazon’s drastic price cuts in titles like Dan Brown’s Inferno and Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl. Those novels have been cut 61% and 56%, respectively, in order to exactly match Overstock’s prices.

    What Amazon has done is basically invalidate Overstock’s claims to be selling books at 10% lower than Amazon’s prices. Many titles are now offered at the exact same price on both sites.

    The Shelf Awareness blog suggests that Amazon could also be feeling a bit emboldened by recent developments in the publishing world:

    Some have speculated that Amazon is also emboldened to engage in dramatic price cutting–which hurts traditional bricks-and-mortar stores and feeds consumer perception that a fair book price is lower than its cost–by the Justice Department’s victory against five major publishers in the e-book agency model case as well as Wall Street’s acceptance of continued losses by Amazon for now in the expectation of retail domination–and major profits–eventually. This last point was seen most recently on Thursday, when Amazon’s quarterly results included a net loss and were below Wall Street expectations but did not provoke the usual rush to sell, as is the case with most companies whose results are disappointing.

    Either way, Amazon has cuts the prices on many titles to historic lows for the company. And in some cases, this move has put the price point on hardcovers well below the e-book price.

    [Shelf Awareness via GigaOm]

  • Amazon Goes On Hiring Spree For U.S. Fulfillment Centers, Creates 5,000 Jobs

    Amazon announced on Monday that it is creating over 5,000 new full-time jobs in the U.S. across its fulfillment network, and it is starting the hiring process now. According to the company, its median pay is 30% higher than that of people who work in traditional retail stores.

    The jobs currently available are in Breinigsville, Pennsylvania, Middletown, Delaware, Chattanooga, Tennessee, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, Charleston, South Carolina, Patterson, California Chester, Virginia, Phoenix, Arizona, Coppell, Texas San Antonio, Texas, Haslet, Texas San Bernardino, California, Hebron, Kentucky, Spartanburg, South Carolina, Indianapolis, Indiana, Tracy, Calif. and Jeffersonville, Indiana.

    The jobs include stock grants, which Amazon says that over the past five years have added an average of 9% to base pay annually.

    “We’re hiring more than 5,000 people to join our team and help us continue to innovate and serve our customers,” said Dave Clark, vice president of worldwide operations and customer service at Amazon. “We’re focused on sustained innovation across Amazon and want to help our employees succeed—whether at Amazon or elsewhere—so we offer programs like Career Choice, where we’ll pay for up to 95% of eligible employees’ tuition regardless of whether the skills they learn are relevant to a career at Amazon.”

    Amazon currently employs over 20,000 full-time employees at its U.S. fulfillment centers alone. In the last year, the company has opened eight fulfillment centers in the U.S., and has already added thousands of jobs as a result.

    The company is also hiring for 2,000 jobs in its customer service network (a mix of part-time and full-time positions) in Grand Forks, North Dakota, Kennewick, Washington, Huntington, West Virginia, and Winchester, Kentucky.