Online shopping giant Amazon said today that it will launch a Japanese-language

Online shopping giant Amazon said today that it will launch a Japanese-language version of its hugely popular Kindle next month as it looks to break into the largely untapped Japanese e-book market.

The retailer’s long-awaited announcement comes a day after Apple unveiled its new iPad Mini, the latest volley in the battle for the multi-billion-dollar tablet sector.

US-based Amazon said in a statement that it would begin selling 50,000 Japanese-language titles from Thursday, while its Kindle Paperwhite became available for pre-order on Wednesday. It is expected to start shipping on November 19.

A Japanese-capable Kindle app will be available for computers, tablets and smartphones from Thursday, the company said.

The wifi only Paperwhite will have a price tag of 8,480 yen ($107), while the 3G-equipped version will sell at 12,980 yen, Amazon said. Both prices are lower than on the US website.

The new Kindle Fire HD with an 8.9-inch (22.6-centimetre) display that was unveiled in the United States last month will be released in December in Japan.

Japan’s existing e-book market is largely a niche affair, mostly comprising comic books for mobile phone users.

Only a limited number of novels and non-fiction titles have been digitized in a country where the unique language protects publishers from foreign competition.

Amazon’s announcement of 50,000 titles is broadly in line with Sony’s nearly 60,000 offered in its own e-book store for use with a proprietary device, but falls well short of the “millions” of titles Amazon.com offers to US customers.

In July e-commerce giant Rakuten launched its Kobo e-reader in Japan, saying it would initially be able to offer around 30,000 titles, but was aiming to grow that figure to 1.5 million over the coming years
.

Japanese publishers, already facing falling paper book sales, have so far been reluctant to digitize their books for fear that e-books could kill physical sales.

Experts say Amazon’s entry could trigger a significant expansion of available digital book titles over the next two to three years.

Source AFP

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *