12-08-2009, 03:55 PM | #1 |
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Nook Accounts Devices and Books
I was reading another thread and thinking about what I posted there and I came to the conclusion that we might be thinking of the nook in terms of the kindle too much. This being related specifically to what the accounts on B&N do.
You do not need an account to use a Nook. You do not need to log into your account to read your book loaded on the nook. You can log into multiple nooks with the same account. As I understand it and according to the nook user guide. You can read your book on the device by entering the DRM password which is the credit card number you used to purchase the book. What does the account do? It allows you to use the store and purchase materials. It also allows you to share your information across many devices including but not limited to notes, highlights, page position, and purchased books. Also you don't need to enter your DRM password if your logged into your account. DRM on books? As I understand it each book needs the password entered into the nook once to unlock it forever on that device. In fact you may not need to enter it for each book but just once for the device. Any thing to add or correct? |
12-08-2009, 04:05 PM | #2 |
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you don't need to log onto anything to read your Kindle. all you need to log on for is managing your Kindle on your pc. books can even be purchased from your Kindle without a log on
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12-08-2009, 04:09 PM | #3 |
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How does amazon know what account to link your book to? What credit card to charge? etc. Are you reffering to logging in or registering your kindle?
Last edited by Propheous; 12-08-2009 at 04:12 PM. |
12-08-2009, 04:13 PM | #4 |
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your device is registered to an email account which is connected to your credit card number.
conceivably, you could order from either your Kindle, or your Amazon account online (it is possible for it to "remember you" and your details) when you first set it up and never have to log on, register, enter a password or anything else ever again |
12-08-2009, 04:22 PM | #5 | |
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Quote:
Your device contacts B&N to get data according to the account that the device is setup to use. You can change that account as you see fit on the device itself. When you do so your content (books etc) are not deleted from the device, but rather only your information linked to your account is removed, such as highlights, notations, currently reading information etc. Also, you will need to setup an account on the device to purchase from the store. I hope that explains the difference. While you do not have your account on your device you can read any books on the device by providing the DRM password. |
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12-08-2009, 04:43 PM | #6 |
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With the Kindle, it gets the serial number registered to your Amazon account when it ships. This ties the device to the account automatically, and the store/DRM servers all work based on this serial number. The upside to this scheme is that it is very 'out of your way' unless you gift a Kindle... then that person needs to figure out how to activate the Kindle onto their Amazon account (which is still pretty simple). The downside is that because authorization is on the server side, people will start losing access to their content after the servers die (say your Kindle dies, you find a replacement, but it can't be authorized).
With the nook, the DRM is based on the book itself. You enter one username/password once per device, and purchasing/downloading from the nook via your B&N library will even let you skip that. You will only ever need to enter it again on a different device, or if you change your CC# with B&N. And with B&N working with Adobe to include this scheme with ADE (Content Server, the device SDK, and the desktop app), it will be possible to take this content to other devices that get the updated SDK in the next year. Sony's Reader, iRex's stuff, the Plastic Logic device, and others will all be able to open this stuff up if they update to the latest device SDK. It is a trade-off in both cases. Amazon comes across as a bit more confident in this case, as they are expecting to stick around in the market, and want the ease of use they can bring by making more of the process automatic. B&N comes across as being less restrictive, and more willing to play in an open market where a buyer has a choice of where to get their content from, or what device to put the content on (Sony is now showing that they are willing to do the same as well). The question I have is: will the Kindle and Amazon be enough of a powerhouse that them playing in their own sandbox for the most part is not a drawback? Or will the market opening up and competitors willing to untie their content stores and devices pressure Amazon into joining in? |
12-08-2009, 05:28 PM | #7 |
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something seems to be a bit off here. I have three Kindles (one will be a gift). my main Kindle gets all of the purchases I make at Amazon, they go directly there. the other two receive the purchases I direct there.
regardless... when I pick up the Kindle, all I do is push two buttons with one hand and I am either looking at the book I was last reading, or my home page which lists my content. I never have to "log on" |
12-08-2009, 05:36 PM | #8 | |
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Quote:
If you sell or give your Kindle to someone else, you have to actually remove it from your account, and have them add it to theirs unless you are sharing an account (which is probably not a great idea unless you trust them with your CC#). You can login with your Amazon account on the website and see the Kindles attached to your account and manage them that way. |
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12-08-2009, 06:02 PM | #9 |
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Amazon's 6-device per ebook limit is generous, but B&N (and eReader) has no device limit at all. Similarly, a Kindle can only read DRMed ebooks specifically downloaded for that Kindle but the Nook can read any DRMed Nook/eReader ebook you have the credit card info for (and also any Adobe ebooks on a single AdobeID).
The Nook approach is a bit more flexible for a family of readers, but Amazon's approach will be good enough for many. Note that registration of the Nook isn't required, but can only be done via AT&T wireless or via WiFi inside a B&N store. This will be an issue for international buyers. |
12-08-2009, 08:05 PM | #10 | |
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12-08-2009, 08:07 PM | #11 |
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He's saying that validation happens in the background, ala "logging in," "calling home," et. al. Just because you're not doing it doesn't mean the device isn't doing it in the background.
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12-08-2009, 08:08 PM | #12 |
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it only does it when whisper net is engaged to dowload a book
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12-08-2009, 09:41 PM | #13 | |
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THIS IS NOT A KINDLE SUCKS THREAD. I have no opinion on the kindle in that matter. |
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12-08-2009, 10:11 PM | #14 | ||
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Quote:
Quote:
and either you are using it incorrectly or I completely misunderstand you |
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12-08-2009, 11:32 PM | #15 | |
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A kindle is tethered to an account. I am not completely sure if you can untether it either, though it may be possible. The only thing a nook is tethered too is the simcard and cellular service for its AT&T account. What this means is that I can buy a Nook use for a year then reset it to factory default give it to my grandma and she can go on her marry way. No ties to me or my content. Going beyond the device we have the e-books you purchase through B&N. These are also not tethered to your account. Meaning you can use them with out logging into B&N or using a device registered to your account. All you need is the password which is the credit card you purchased the book with. What this means is that you can transfer it to any device that is capable of reading the format (which I think is epub can someone confirm?) and enter the password and read it. I hope this helps clear this all up. These are somewhat subtle and not so obvious differences from what I understand that kindle provides. |
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