Android’s first real e-reader was born today
Posted: October 20th, 2009 | Author: TimConneally | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: alex, Android, att, barnes, Barnes & Noble, book, e ink, e paper, e-book, e-reader, electrophoretic, Google, irex, kindle, noble, nook, plastic logic, reader, sony, spring design, sprint, touch, touchscreen, vizplex | No Comments »Never mind that bullshit about the Spring Design “Alex” yesterday. Total patent troll “prior art” move. The Barnes and Noble Nook is real and it’s making me drool.
I’m a Kindle 2 owner and fan. I love how easy it is to read, I love how thin and light it is, I love the free connection to Sprint’s “Now Network” (I wish you could add more quotes around a phrase to increase the sarcasm/attitude/cynicism) . Obviously, I’m also extremely focused on the Android operating system, ecosystem, and lifestyle. So nook really excites me.
I was tempted to rush out my first Android Bakery video podcast to talk about the nook. But I held off.

nook eReader - Android power
There’s no shortage of news about nook right now. I wrote about it on Betanews earlier today, saying that it somehow managed to combine the spirit of two most “walled garden” tech devices (iphone and kindle) to make a new, uber desirable device.
But the thing is, we don’t know where it fits in the Android family. I contacted B&N this afternoon to see if they could get me in touch with a developer who could explain, just how much of an Android device the nook really is, but I haven’t heard back from them yet. That’s how excited I am. I’m posting a story before I even have any useful info. Just check back, I’ll have something good.