..http://ilmk.wordpress.com/2010/06/12/inside-the-nooks-lendme-feature/Inside the NOOK’s LendMe featureBy bufocalvin
Barnes & Noble has been doing a lot to promote their EBR (E-Book Reader) the NOOK (sic) lately.
I’m sure there are a lot of happy NOOK owners out there.
The Kindle (six inch) and the NOOK are direct competitors. They both have a six inch VizPlex E Ink screen, they both use wireless to download books, and they both cost $259.
For a more detailed comparison, see this earlier post.
The feature I hear mentioned the most as something that the NOOK has and the Kindle doesn’t is the ability to lend books.
I’ve seen people say that’s why they considered (or even bought) the NOOK over the Kindle.
While it is undeniably a nice feature, and yes, I think Kindleers would use it sometimes if we had it, I do think it merits some explanation.
In a sense, the balancing feature is the text-to-speech (“read aloud”) on the Kindle. I think both features are great for some people (I’ve listened to TTS for hours), but can be easily overestimated before actually being used. Oh, and I would figure that the LendMe has been used more successfully as a promotional tool than TTS…at least, since four of the Big Six US trade publishers started blocking the latter.
What are the basics?
You go to a book in your nook’s library. You tap a button that says Lend. You then enter (or select someone you have previously entered) someone’s e-mail address. You can add a personal message (which is nice…you can let them know why you think they would like the book). You tap Send and Confirm.
Your friend gets a message in their e-mail (or in the Daily on their NOOK). They have seven days to respond. They then have fourteen days to read the book. During that time, it is unavailable to you on your NOOK…which, of course, mimics a paperbook.
That’s it…sounds cool, right? I’d probably use it with a sibling who isn’t on my account, from time to time.
Limitations
There are a couple of key limitations:
1. You can only lend a given book once…ever. Not once per person, but once altogether. If you get the latest Janet Evanovich, you can lend it to your Mom or your sister, but not to both. That’s even after the book is automatically “returned” after fourteen days
2. The lending is a fourteen day period, period. If the other person gets done in three days, you still can’t get it back. If fourteen days go by and they haven’t had a chance to finish, tough.
3. You can’t give the book away or sell it…just lend it. That’s probably clear from the LendMe name, but I think it’s worth mentioning. You can’t give away or sell Kindle books either, of course (assuming they have Digital Rights Management…not all do, apparently)
4. You can only do this if the publisher allow it
I want to get more in-depth on this last point, because it is an important one.
Just as publishers have blocked text-to-speech access on many Kindle store books, publishers have “disallowed” LendMe on many Barnes & Noble e-books.
Here’s a breakdown on a few categories:
Category All LendMe %
Fiction 34278 11531 34%
SF&F 3766 1536 41%
Classics 2158 1225 57%
Nonfiction 16165 4836 30%