Amazon boasts that it offers more than 190,000 magazine, book, newspaper and blog titles. To learn about the pros of owning a Kindle, go to Amazon's website. Some of the pros (from Gadgetsnoop.com) include:
- Amazon and books are peas in a pod, the user experience seems carefully crafter to lead to smooth downloading and reading workflow
- The form factor is interesting, the screen similar in size to a book and the e-ink technology looks like it offers a grayscale rendering, and it’s light
- The eBooks are less expensive is some cases, than buying and shipping the paper counterpart - there’s a definite “Green” notion to this.
- The battery is user-replaceable (cough - Apple, get a clue)
- No subscriptions or additional fees, beyond the cost of the device, for wireless access, 1yr warranty
- Promised >1 min. downloads
- USB 2.0 connectivity for PC and Mac, but does not require a computer
- Email documents and images to the device, read blogs and newspapers
David Fowler, a blogger, touches on the downside of a Kindle:
- Poor visual appeal: Black text on a dingy grey background instead of white; brief screen blackout for each page turn; device looks like old technology.
- Clunky scroll wheel for navigating; Kindle would benefit from touch-screen technology such as used by Apple.
- Lack of real page numbers limits use for students needing to provide footnotes for quotes.
- Frequent page turns are tiring; difficult to “pre-read” a chapter or know how many pages to go in a chapter; not a great device for reading long books.
1 comment:
I am always interested in new technology but very few times do I want to be the guinea pig as they will come out with Kindle 2.0 the day after I buy the first version. I would have a problem with reading an entire book on a screen though. My eyes are bad enough as it is!
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