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Books

Amazon Piles On the Prime Benefits With New 'Prime Reading' Perk (geekwire.com) 54

Amazon today unveiled the latest perk for Prime members in the United States: Prime Reading. With this, the company is offering access to "over a thousand" Kindle books, comics, magazines and more. The selection will rotate, the company says, suggesting that you should be able to read titles that aren't available today. GeekWire adds: The new perk, Prime Reading, lets Amazon Prime members access more than 1,000 e-books from best-selling authors at no extra charge, read a rotating selection of popular magazines, and read content from the company's Kindle Singles library, including classic short stories and essays. Prime reading is available on the Kindle app for iOS and Android, and on the company's Kindle e-readers and Fire tablets. The new perk comes in addition to the Kindle Owners' Lending Library, which lets Prime members who own Amazon devices borrow one e-book a month from a larger selection of titles. Separate from a Prime membership, Amazon offers the $10/month Kindle Unlimited e-book subscription service.Amazon Prime program costs $99 per year.
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Amazon Piles On the Prime Benefits With New 'Prime Reading' Perk

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    • by Anonymous Coward

      you get free health care

    • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

      by vikingpower ( 768921 )

      There is nothing fucking cool about Giant Corp. "offering" you around 1.000 eBooks in order to vendor-lock you in. Rather, you be glad to be in Canada. I'm in Austria and visit physical book stores, getting to hold physical books and helping physical people to make a living. Which is way closer to my definition of "cool".

      • "There is nothing fucking cool about Giant Corp. "offering" you around 1.000 eBooks in order to vendor-lock you in. "

        I buy all my books in Kindle form now (readability everywhere, zero weight, being able to have all the reading I want available at all times) anyway, so this is a pure win for me. And what exactly is "vendor locked in" about having free access to all the Project Gutenberg content, as well as everything new and almost everything in between? And besides, because I run the Kindle app on an iPad,

      • What's with your prejudice against a company that became big by providing what its customers want?

    • by ADRA ( 37398 )

      Dang, beat me to it. Yeah, Amazon Prime is mostly useless in Canada. $80 for significantly fewer features? Pass. If anything, I'm using Amazon less year after year. It's just not offering the savings that it did previously.

      • Try living in Hawai`i, where Amazon Prime gets you free shipping that usually takes about two WEEKS. And still costs $99.

    • Yes, but the threshold for free shipping is lower here. They just raised it to $35 in the last week or two. It was $25 before that.

  • by The-Ixian ( 168184 ) on Wednesday October 05, 2016 @01:53PM (#53018909)

    I am guessing that new releases will not be included in this.

    I currently buy all my e-books from B&N and read them on my Nook e-ink. I got locked in to that because, at the time, the Kindle didn't have a backlight and the Nook did.

    Turns out, I like the Nook's size and weight and I also like not living 100% in Amazon's ecosystem.

    Still... they may still hook me into another year of Prime if the selection of sci-fi is decent. I will just have to read them on a tablet (heavy and bright and battery hungry)

    I don't order enough stuff on Amazon to make the 2 day deliver worthwhile and the only reason I kept it for another year was for the Prime video... but it seems like all the good stuff is going paid anyway so I don't see much point in that service anymore.

    • by PCM2 ( 4486 )

      I currently buy all my e-books from B&N and read them on my Nook e-ink. I got locked in to that because, at the time, the Kindle didn't have a backlight and the Nook did.

      Come on, dude, this is /. Do better.

      You bought the Nook because it used the open Epub file format and you didn't want to get "locked in."

      Or else turn in your card.

      • I bought the Kobo because of the backlight, and I still like the Kobo better than my Nook, or my Kindle, but I end up on my Kindle most of the time because that's where the free books are.

        I use calibre to convert non-DRM'd books from epub to mobi and back - do I still need to turn in my geek cred card?

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      I am guessing that new releases will not be included in this.

      I was looking at the current offerings for Prime Reading. Most of them are book 1 of a multi-book series. What do you think the odds are that later books in the series never get added to Prime Reading? To be fair though, I did download The Man in the High Castle(which is on Prime Reading), as I enjoyed the show and alternate history can be a fun read.

    • Purchasing books from Barnes and Noble or Amazon absolutely does NOT lock you in to their ecosystem. All either does is provide a convenient storefront. I buy most of my books from Amazon because they make it convenient and easy to shop, and because I like my Kindle's hardware. But the first thing I do when I buy any book is load it into Calibre, convert it to epub, and archive on my backed up filesystem. No lock in. Some people may point to the DRM, but both B&N and Amazon's DRM have the same eff

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Talking about Amazon Canada here. Lately their shipping and delivery has been progressively shittier. Items can sit for a week before getting shipped, often just one day before promised delivery, and still pretend they can make it. They also started using a carrier that offers no tracking information, returns package for no reason, not to mention nearly always late. They also removed the 10 day price drop protection. Amazon used to be my exclusive online shopping destination. But now I have serious hesitat

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Talking about Amazon Canada here. Lately their shipping and delivery has been progressively shittier. Items can sit for a week before getting shipped, often just one day before promised delivery, and still pretend they can make it. They also started using a carrier that offers no tracking information, returns package for no reason, not to mention nearly always late. They also removed the 10 day price drop protection. Amazon used to be my exclusive online shopping destination. But now I have serious hesitati

  • by XxtraLarGe ( 551297 ) on Wednesday October 05, 2016 @02:03PM (#53018981) Journal

    Another benefit I won't use from Amazon. Amazon Video has some good content, but they don't separate the free stuff from the pay stuff, which makes it a lot more difficult to browse through, so I just use Netflix.

    I got Prime for the free 2-day shipping, and that only seems to happen once in a blue moon. I ordered some camping gear a week in advance of my trip, and only part of order was shipped. I received a notification the day before my trip that my other part of the order hadn't shipped yet, and wouldn't arrive until after my camping trip. They offer incentives for you to use slower shipping methods, they should give you credits toward your prime membership if you select 2-day shipping and the package arrives late.

    • They do but you have to whine about it... they'll tack on a few months onto your prime membership each time.
    • If your package arrives outside of the 2 day window talk to Customer Service and they'll typically give you some sort of credit; either an additional month or so of Prime or a monetary credit for your purchase.
    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      I got Prime for the free 2-day shipping, and that only seems to happen once in a blue moon. I ordered some camping gear a week in advance of my trip, and only part of order was shipped. I received a notification the day before my trip that my other part of the order hadn't shipped yet, and wouldn't arrive until after my camping trip. They offer incentives for you to use slower shipping methods, they should give you credits toward your prime membership if you select 2-day shipping and the package arrives lat

    • I've just cancelled Amazon Video and the main reason was because of the mixing of free and prime stuff. Too many times I've been searching for something good, stumbled across something only to discover its not actually part of prime. Also the fact that even when you find something in Prime, chances are not all seasons will be free.

      Netflix has its own flaws, but its a million miles above the annoyances of prime video.

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      Another benefit I won't use from Amazon. Amazon Video has some good content, but they don't separate the free stuff from the pay stuff, which makes it a lot more difficult to browse through, so I just use Netflix.

      You are aware that on both the full site and the Amazon Video app you can sort by "Included with Prime", right?

      • No, I didn't. I haven't used it in a long time, so this may be a newer feature. Thanks for the tip, I'll have to check it out!
  • And Amazon Prime in Canada still sucks donkey balls...

  • THIS is what I call news for nerds.

  • Amazon Prime, where you have to pay an extra $5.99 for a box of any "pantry" items.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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