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Last month, the company said it was going to continue to make its more basic, black-and-white e-readers, but will farm out the tablet manufacturing to a third-party. Lynch hadn't offered specifics of how a tablet partnership would work, but said at the time that the company was in discussions with "a lot of interested parties." Some speculated that Microsoft Corp., which has a 6.8 percent stake in the Nook unit, could offer to buy it outright. The bad results troubled investors, who sent the shares down sharply. The stock had recovered a bit since then, closing Monday at $17.66. Michael Norris, senior analyst of consumer media and technology at Simba Information, on Monday described Lynch as "exceptionally smart and optimistic to a fault." But he said that Lynch "never went far enough." Barnes & Noble should have created a better in-store browsing experience that melded more closely with its e-books, Norris said. For example, shoppers should be able to just scan their cellphone and buy a book in the store. "They failed to see the physical store as an asset instead of a liability," he added. In February, Riggio had disclosed in a regulatory filing that he wanted to acquire the company's stores and website but not the business that makes the Nook readers. Sozzi and other analyst said Monday that the fact that the company didn't name a successor for Lynch raises more of a possibility that Riggio will push to take the company private.
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