At this point, technology is changing so rapidly that it's difficult to predict anything further ahead than tomorrow, but I'm just not as certain as Michael Hyatt that the Kindle will continue to "thrive" in a future with so many multifunction, portable devices … and, let's not forget, the printed book.
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%0D%0A%20%20He%20wrote%3A%20"When%20Apple%20launched%20the%20iPad%20last%20spring,%20most%20everyone%20assumed%20it%20would%20kill%20the%20Kindle.%20After%20all,%20the%20iPad%20had%20a%20multi-touch%20screen,%20a%20crisp,%20color%20display,%20the%20ability%20to%20view%20books,%20photos,%20and%20movies,%20and%20run%20thousands%20of%20applications."%0D%0A<%2Fp>%0D%0A
%0D%0A%20%20He%20also%20writes%3A%20"it%20is%20clear%20that%20we%20have%20two%20distinct%20product%20classes%20here%20with%20less%20overlap%20than%20originally%20thought.%20Apparently,%20the%20market%20is%20big%20enough%20for%20both."%0D%0AOn%20this%20point,%20I%20don't%20disagree,%20however,%20I%20don't%20believe%20the%20battle%20is%20over.%0D%0A%0D%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.bookbusinessmag.com%2Farticle%2Fthoughts-michael-hyatts-view-ipad-didnt-kill-kindle%2F" target="_blank" class="email" data-post-id="6011" type="icon_link"> Email Email
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