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Books Businesses

Amazon Brings Its Physical Bookstore To New York (usatoday.com) 36

Amazon's first New York City bookstore, Amazon Books, will open to the general public on Thursday morning, marking Amazon's highest-profile move into bricks-and-mortar retail to date. Even as the book shop is a physical bookstore, some "Amazon" elements can be felt. From a report: While some may be excited that this is an "Amazon Store," similar to Apple and Microsoft's respective flagship stores located just blocks away, Amazon says its goal for the new store is the same as it was when the online retail giant first started two decades ago: To sell books. "We have this 20 years of information about books and ratings, and we have millions and millions of customers who are passionate," said Jennifer Cast, vice president of Amazon Books. "It really is a different way to surface great books." The 4,000 square-foot-store features roughly 3,000 books, all with their covers facing out in order to better to "communicate their own essence," Cast says. The company's recommendation system makes a physical appearance in the bookstore through an "if you like this" section, which combines the data Amazon gathers on the books listed with human curators to recommend new books. To someone who walks in to browse, it feels like a high-tech Barnes and Noble.
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Amazon Brings Its Physical Bookstore To New York

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  • books on Ruby on Rails. Did you know that customers like you also bought books by Isaac Asimov?

  • by bensafrickingenius ( 828123 ) on Wednesday May 24, 2017 @09:52AM (#54477127)
    The website that killed brick-and-mortar bookstores is branching out... into brick-and-mortar bookstores.
    • What's old becomes new again. I would love to have a bookstore in my neighborhood again. Not sure if I want an Amazon-branded bookstore. Amazon store clerks, assuming that they have actual employees, are probably as clueless as the Amazon recommendation algorithm.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Are you seriously that obtuse? The mission of Amazon wasn't to shut down bricks and mortar, it was to shut down other bookstores. This move allows them to kick out the last leg from under the chair but bringing in the smaller market of buyers who still don't buy online.

      The fact that so many here thing the battle is between internet vs storefront businesses is very telling as to why people simply shouldn't take business ideas kicked around on Slashdot seriously.

      I hate to sound too trollish about this but it

      • Not paradox. Irony. It's hard to find accurate examples of irony these days, but this is surely one. And I never said it was Amazon's mission/goal/intent. I also didn't make a judgement. Just stated a fact. If it wasn't Amazon that killed brick-and-mortar bookstores it would have been something else, and I wouldn't have ascribed evil intent to that something else, either.
  • I can't imagine Mr. Bezos doing this without a solid expectation that it will become profitable. Probably a good part of the justification for doing this is the success of the Apple Stores which is feeding the human needs to physically touch and experience the products, talk to experts (to be fair, the Apple Store employees are pretty good - much better than what you get in a Best Buy or other traditional bricks and mortar store), see accessories that go with the things they are buying and seeing others in

  • So since they track everything people do online, do they also require a barcode tattoo to enter their stores? Maybe an ear tag? Do they require a DNA sample? I'm sure they could ask for any of these things, and multitudes of brain dead people would do it, if only they could save a buck or two.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Barcode tattoos are so yesterday. They'll use facial recognition track all the books you read, or even glance at. They already use such a system in their physical grocery store to avoid the checkout line.

    • Just your debit, credit or phone number.
  • Amazon treats workers like garbage [gizmodo.com]. I sympathize with those mistreated workers. I won't buy squat from them. I told their recruiters the same thing. Their kind of business model belongs in a Chinese sweatshop. They aren't welcome here.

    Being an avid reader, I'm also a bit insulted by the way they want to enhance the visual appeal of the store at the expense of having a (much) smaller number of books. Also, a 4000 square foot bookstore is pretty small. Half Price Books [hpb.com] in Dallas has a 55,000 square foot re

    • by CharlieG ( 34950 )

      The issue in NYC right now is the lack of bookstores
      In the Bronx? NONE. In Queens? One small indy (a 2nd about to open) and one used book store that I know of (not counting College campus 'textbook' stores)
      Manhattan has dozens, particularly if you count "specialty" bookstore - You know, like Fil Caravan Inc. which is just Middle Eastern Culture, or Bauman Rare Books - which carries books from the 15th thru 20th Century (note, not 21st - Bring a card with a LARGE line of credit. I saw one book I'd have l

      • I'm in Queens and i've seen the B&N stores close. B&N still has stores here but they are in expensive locations and the ones that closed were too close to other stores so what happened was women would drop their kids off to read some books while they went shopping in other stores nearby.

        The new Amazon store is by Penn Station and away from most residential areas and too far from virtually all women's clothing store. It's a nice location to stop by to pay money for a book on the way home.

        B&N even

    • Amazon treats workers like garbage [gizmodo.com].

      The unemployment rate in America is 4.6%, which is "full employment". In Seattle it is 3.1%, and businesses are struggling to find enough workers. So if Amazon employees don't like their jobs, there are plenty of alternatives.

      • The unemployment rate in America is 4.6%, which is "full employment". In Seattle it is 3.1%, and businesses are struggling to find enough workers. So if Amazon employees don't like their jobs, there are plenty of alternatives.

        Nice "Alternative Facts." This is the often-parroted line. First and foremost, the availability of other jobs is not an excuse to treat employees like shit. 4.6% nationally and 3.1% in Seattle (numbers that are extremely conservative and obtained from methodologies that are suspect) can not be described a "plenty of alternatives".

        Now go back to handwringing about how your boy Trump is being mistreated by the Fake Press and their Fake News.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Half Price Books is a great place. We have several in our area. If I want to travel down to Portland we have Powell's bookstores too, which rivals anything Amazon will ever do or has ever done. They have over a million books at their flagship store and one of the largest selections of technical books to peruse though that you've ever seen.

      You want something out of print or put out by a small independent publisher, good luck finding it on Amazon, they think it doesn't exist. I've had to buy several books

    • Also, a 4000 square foot bookstore is pretty small. Half Price Books in Dallas has a 55,000 square foot retail space with used books you can't even find on Amazon

      Have you ever even been in a modern bookstore? 4000 square foot is on the largish end of the hump the bell curve. 55,000 square feet is way the hell out at the end of tail, a freakish outlier. Of the dozen or so Half Price books I've been in over the years, they all cluster pretty much in 2,000-,3000 square foot range. Not to mention the Half-p

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I'd like to speak with a curator about my love for furry, tentacle hentai porn. Got any recommendations?

  • Amazon is what Barnes & Noble was dreaming of becoming--a gigantic store with all book covers showing off book cover artwork and lavish reader praises with exclamation points -- before it got eaten.

    • Amazon is what Barnes & Noble was dreaming of becoming--a gigantic store with all book covers showing off book cover artwork and lavish reader praises with exclamation points -- before it got eaten.

      I was thinking of the same. And it is quite sad. Obviously it is a subjective position from my part. Bizness is bizness.

      But I do tend to love going to B&N (or Books-A-Million or a local library close home that is embedded with a children's museum and local coffee shop.) It is nice to go there, alone, with wife and kids and/or to meet a friend, have coffee and browse/buy books and magazines. Or to listen to a writer, for example.

      It was a good place to start a in-the-middle-of-theday date (when I wa

  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Wednesday May 24, 2017 @11:15AM (#54477681)
    Amazon's trying out these brick-and-mortar things in multiple cities. Here's a pretty funny review experience from Chicago:
    http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/ct-amazon-store-chicago-rev-ent-0403-20170401-column.html

    "There are no quirks, no attempts at warmth. There is no store cat. There are no handwritten notes about what the staff loves. The only difference between the children's section and the rest of the store is that the children's section has a rug. It is, in businessspeak, a bricks-and-mortar presence, so unimaginative its facade is brick."

    "what human being-based company would install a Kindle Reader in a book aisle with this encouragement: 'Explore books in this aisle on the Kindle Reader'? You could also explore the books in front of you by picking them up ..."
  • I thought: any online business that has a physical presence in the state must collect sales tax on all purchases. Doesn't this one store force Amazon to collect sales tax on all purchases by NYers?

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

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