Front page news on Amazon.com and being promoted to Amazon Associates, the Kindle 2 has arrived.
Personally, I don't see why you would buy books you can only license, never own. Books on a device that's available only in the United States. Isn't technology amazing? It can create arbitrary barriers that never existed before in the physical world.
But if you want one, here you go. It's US$359 and will be released February 24, 2009.
pre-order Kindle 2 from Amazon.com
I do have to admire Amazon for understanding a deep truth of the digital world - in the end, you can only monetize physical things. Apple understood this by making their money on the iPod, not the music.
UPDATE: Also the note at Amazon that "original Kindle owners are first in line to receive Kindle 2 [if they order one]" reminds me that this is new technology. That means unlike paper, which is rather well-established, the Kindle will become obsolete. Rapidly. Those books that have been sitting on your bookshelf for 20 years - no problem, reach over and open them up. In 20 years, how many generations of book-reading technology do you think you will have to go through, between upgrades and failures? At hundreds of dollars for every replacement. For content that you don't even own in any meaningful way. I don't think that's progress. ENDUPDATE
Personally I think a more interesting development is Google Book Search Mobile. As well, the New York Times reports that Amazon is also working on delivering "Kindle books" to cellphones, presumably with the same DRM. There is no sign of that being available from Amazon today (and I don't see what their incentive would be, since it breaks the "you only make money from physical things" model).
Full disclosure: The above are Amazon Affiliate links (price and everything are identical, I just get a percentage of your purchase).
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