Showing posts with label Amazon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amazon. Show all posts

Tuesday 6 August 2013

Amazon.com's CEO Jeff Bezos buys The Washington Post

in a surprise deal that ends the Graham family's 80 years of ownership and hands one of the country's most influential publications to the businessman whose Internet company has transformed retailing, In a transaction rich in symbolism, digital billionaire Jeff Bezos, the founder and CEO of Amazon.com, has agreed to buy one of the nation's best and best-known legacy media publications, The Washington Post. Bezos, hailed by many as technology visionary, called his acquisition a personal endeavor and reassured employees and readers of the 135-year-old newspaper he will preserve its journalistic tradition, while driving innovation. The acquisition, the latest in a flurry of deals for print publications including the New York Times Co's (NYT.N) sale of the Boston Globe for $70 million, is a another sign of the unprecedented challenges newspapers face as advertising revenue and readership decline.
Shares of the Washington Post Co (WPO.N) climbed more than 5 percent to $599.85 after hours - their highest level in almost five years.
Donald Graham, the chairman and CEO of the Washington Post Co, said in an interview that he and his niece Katharine Weymouth, the Post's publisher, made the decision to put the newspaper up for sale earlier this year after looking at its financial forecasts.
"For the first time in either of our lives we said to each other: is ownership by the Washington Post Co the best thing for the newspaper? We could keep it alive, that wasn't the issue. The issue was could we make it strong?"
Graham and Bezos discussed the deal at two meetings in Sun Valley, Idaho during the annual Allen & Co media and tech conference in July. The investment bank had been retained earlier in the year to gauge potential buyer interest, and is now the banker on the deal.
Graham's company had talked to no more than a dozen parties about selling the paper. He declined to name the other parties.
"I named a price and Jeff agreed to pay it," said Graham, who initially thought Bezos would be an unlikely buyer. "To my surprise, when (Allen & Co) said they would call him, I said that would be great but I didn't think he would be interested."
The investment bank ended up advising on the deal.
At a meeting in January, Graham said longtime friend and former Washington Post board member Warren Buffett referred to Bezos as the best CEO in the United States for his technology and business acumen.
"I asked (Bezos) why he wanted to do it and his reasons are the best ones: he believes in what newspapers do and what the Post does and that it's important to the country," Graham said.
The Amazon CEO took that message directly to employees in a letter posted on the newspaper's website.
"I understand the critical role the Post plays in Washington, DC and our nation, and the Post's values will not change," Bezos wrote in the letter.
"There will of course be change at the Post over the coming years. That's essential and would have happened with or without new ownership," Bezos added. "We will need to invent, which means we will need to experiment."
In addition to the newspaper, Bezos gets other publishing businesses, including the Express newspaper, The Gazette Newspapers, Southern Maryland Newspapers, Fairfax County Times, El Tiempo Latino and Greater Washington Publishing.
The real estate, including the paper's headquarters business and online news sites such as Slate, will remain with the Washington Post Co. And the paper's operations will be kept separate from Amazon.com, according to the Washington Post.
The Washington Post is the seventh largest daily in the United States and was where journalists Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein broke the "Watergate" story which led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon in 1974.
While its legend and status loomed large, the Washington Post represents only a fraction of the company which has expanded into a stable of holdings, including education and health care services and most recently an industrial supplier. The collection of companies that make up the Washington Post is akin to that of Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc (BRKa.N), which owns disparate businesses from railroads to underwear as well as a stake in the Post.
And yet, the Washington Post suffers from the same hurdles besieging big city newspapers across the United States. The company's newspaper division reported an operating loss of $49.3 million for the six months ending June compared to a loss of $33.2 million during the same period last year.
Weymouth, who will continue to serve as the paper's CEO and publisher after the sale, told Reuters she did not think there was a "magic bullet" to resolving the problems. But the resources Bezos brought to the table were a plus.
"He's smart and innovative and has access to a lot of smart people," she said.
Bezos, who has built Seattle-based Amazon.com into a shopping and online technology force over the last two decades, made a small foray into media earlier this year with an investment in Internet news site Business Insider.
Bezos is the world's 19th richest person with a fortune of $25.2 billion, according to Forbes magazine. His investment vehicle, Bezos Expeditions, is invested in a number of companies including Twitter and Business Insider.
His major personal project is called Blue Origin, which aims to be one of the first non-government funded ventures to send people and cargo into space, potentially winning lucrative contracts that were once fulfilled by NASA.
Bezos has already spent millions of dollars on this project, with millions more in the pipeline.
He did not elaborate in great detail on his motivations behind his latest deal, which caught many industry watchers by surprise. He does not play a prominent role in politics but has been described by friends as holding libertarian views. He and his wife did make public a $2.5 million contribution to a Washington state campaign to legalize same-sex marriage last year.
The deal comes on the heels of near-unprecedented media deal activity this year, with the Globe transaction announced just over the weekend, News Corp (NWSA.O) spinning out its newspapers, and the Tribune Co hiving off its publishing business like the Los Angeles Times and Chicago Tribune from its broadcasting division.
Free of its print assets, the Washington Post could continue to snap up other properties that align with the six TV stations in cities like Houston, Washington DC and Miami and cable TV services in more than a dozen states.
"It will be interesting to see, is this the first step in the transformation of the business?" said John Miller, senior vice president at Chicago's Ariel Investments, a top-10 investor in the Washington Post. "The board is making the right decision. They obviously felt like it was a good deal. It will be interesting to see how they allocate capital going forward."
Bezos, who is paying $250 million in cash, is handling the deal individually, and the fabled newspaper will not be part of online retailer Amazon.com.
The sale comes against the backdrop of the digital revolution, which has transformed the way people consume news and profoundly disrupted the newspaper business.
In a letter to Washington Post staffers Monday addressing concerns in the newsroom over the sale of the family-owned newspaper, Bezos said, "The values of the Post do not need changing." Mr Bezos said in a letter to staff at the company that he is excited about the opportunity for reinvention at the paper.
"I won’t be leading The Washington Post day-to-day. I am happily living in “the other Washington” where I have a day job that I love. Besides that, The Post already has an excellent leadership team that knows much more about the news business than I do, and I’m extremely grateful to them for agreeing to stay on,” he said.
Staff reacted to the sale on social media with Ezra Klein tweeting "I've bought a lot of stuff from Jeff Bezos's companies so this was really only fair."




The Washington Post and The Boston Globe, which were founded over 125 years ago, were sold for much less than some social content start-ups that have only been around for a few years. A look at: Tumblr, Instagram, The Washington Post and The Boston Globe
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Saturday 3 August 2013

Apple told to cut ties with ebook publishers Kindle maker Amazon to benifit

The US Department of Justice on Friday said that tech giant Apple must cut ties with the five publishers with which it was found guilty of running an e-book price-fixing scheme.
Last month, a US district court in New York found Apple guilty of conspiring with publishers to fix book prices for readers using its iPad and iPhone devices. 

On Friday, Justice Department officials submitted to the court a plan for Apple to cut its existing ties to the publishers and to make it easier for its rivals to sell books on its platforms. 

"Under the department's proposed order, Apple's illegal conduct will cease and Apple and its senior executives will be prevented from conspiring to thwart competition in the future," assistant attorney general Bill Baer said. 

"Plaintiffs' proposed injunction is a draconian and punitive intrusion into Apple's business, wildly out of proportion to any adjudicated wrongdoing or potential harm," Apple attorneys argued in the legal brief.

The proposed settlement would see Apple end its current agreements with five US-based publishers: Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins, Macmillan, Penguin and Simon & Schuster. 

The tech firm would promise not to enter new contracts with the five to limit price competition in the next five years, and would allow other e-book retailers to link to their products from iPad and iPhone apps for two years. 

Apple would also be ordered to pay the salary of an external monitor to confirm its compliance with anti-trust laws. 

The Department of Justice lodged a civil antitrust lawsuit against Apple and the publishers in April last year. 

It has since reached settlements with four of the publishers and has an agreement with Macmillan that is yet to be approved by the court. 

Friday's proposition on Apple's settlement still has to be approved by a federal judge. 

Under the existing settlements, the publishers agreed to end any agreements they have with retailers like Apple to prevent them from discounting titles sold through their platforms. 

Through its devices and software, Apple allows readers to buy electronic versions of books online and download them to a personal digital library. 

In this it competes with other retailers such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble, which sell e-books through online "apps" on mobile devices, using operating systems such as Microsoft's Windows or Google's Android. 

The settlement would oblige Apple to allow retailers to "provide links from their e-book apps to their e-bookstores, allowing customers who purchase and read e-books on their iPads and iPhones easily to compare Apple's prices with those of its competitors."Forcing Apple to cut ties with publishers could wind up handing the e-book market to Kindle-maker Amazon.com, according to analysts.

Tuesday 16 July 2013

Amazon Kindle Fire HD to get a sequel. Rumored for August - September launch

Kindle means ‘to be able to light fire’ and that is what the Amazon Kindle fire does. Any news about it seems to go ablaze. Amazon is said to be gearing up to launch the successor to the Kindle Fire HD tablet, dubbed as the Kindle Fire HD 2. As per a report by a Taiwanese web publication, Amazon is expected to launch its new range of Kindle Fire tablets which will include the Kindle Dire HD 2 sometime in the month of August or September. The report claims that Amazon has plans to launch three new Kindle tablets including a new Kindle Fire variant that will replace the entry level Kindle Fire priced at $159, the Kindle Fire HD 7.0-inch successor which would replace the current Kindle Fire HD 7.0-inch and a revamped Kindle Fire HD 8.9-inch tablet that replaces the existing 8.9-inch Kindle Fire HD. If the rumours are true, Amazon's next generation Kindle Fire tablets would be up against the likes of the Google Nexus 2 and Apple iPad mini 2 which are also expected to launched later this year. While Google is expected to launch its next generation Nexus tablet in August with the latest Android version running, Apple is said to be gearing up to launch its iPad mini 2 in the holiday season. Amazon plans to launch next generation Kindle Fire tablets with new design and better screens. Amazon has plans to upgrade its 7.0-inch Kindle Fire entry-level tablet with a higher resolution screen of 1280x800 pixels. The new models of the Kindle Fire tablets are expected to be lighter and could feature a more angular design and the corners of the tablets would not be rounded as well. The KIndle Fire HD is a superb device, but we expect a follow-up device at some point this year. The KIndle Fire HD has some serious rivals in the form of the Google Nexus 7 and the iPad mini and so it seems certain that Amazon will want to capitalise on its success. It will also be interesting if Kindle launches a new model of the Kindle Paperwhite ereader, which was announced in September 2012 and featured a new illuminated screen. The existing Amazon Kindle Fire HD matches the Nexus 7 in terms of price and hardware and happily tramples all over the iPad mini on price and screen resolution. Kindles are going from strength to strength - indeed new research from April 2013 showed that new Kindle owners are not only buying significantly more books, but they are even buying more printed books than they would have otherwise as a result. Eight million people in the UK now own a Kindle, while the Kindle Fire makes up 22 per cent of US tablet sales. We'd expect the new Kindle Fire to have a release date around the same time of the year as the last Kindle refresh, so we were expecting something in September 2013 in time for the Christmas season. Starting from just £159, and offering a 7-inch HD display and a 1.2GHz dual-core CPU, the Kindle Fire HD appears to offer great value for money and we'd expect any new model to follow the same path to keep in touch with the Nexus 7. Expect the next Kindle Fire to be quad-core - the current model features a Texas Instruments 1.2GHz dual-core TI OMAP 4460 CPU which excels for most use, but it doesn't match up with the very best in the tablet space. This processor is based on ARM's Cortex-A9 architecture, which is becoming outmoded by Cortex-A15. This is an obvious area for improvement - while the Kindle Fire HD screen is great at 1,280 x 800 pixels, the 216ppi display has an insignificant resolution compared to the iPad 4, for example. Amazon is rumored to be coming out with new Kindle Fire tablets to compete with the likes of the Nexus 7 2 and iPad mini 2 and it looks like the company may be looking to launch the new Kindle Fires, including the Kindle Fire HD 2, sometime in August or September. While Apple’s iPad mini 2 and Google’s Nexus 7 2 have dominated the rumor mill as of late, there is a third name to throw into the hat. Amazon, which released its Kindle Fire HD tablets to challenge the likes of the Nexus 7, iPad mini and iPad in 2012, is also rumored to be developing next-generation tablets for release sometime in 2013. Other specifications remain out of sight for the moment though consumers can expect a heavily customized version of Android that features Amazon’s various services, design tweaks and cameras of some kind. Design-wise, the new Kindle Fire range will use a more 'angular' casing with a "flat slope out to the edges instead of a curved slope, and corners that aren’t as rounded". The source described it as 'chiselled'. The buttons will be positioned on the sloped part rather than the back to avoid accidental presses. The tablets will also be lighter than the current generation. This information can be classed as rumour for now but it doesn't seem farfetched. We'll keep our ears to the ground for any more information on the new Kindle Fire tablets.