Comments on: Initial reactions to my Kindle 2
The Kindle 2 still has growing up to do, but this iteration is still a convenient way to read when on the go. It offers a qualitatively different experience from reading on a laptop or a phone.
The Kindle 2 still has growing up to do, but this iteration is still a convenient way to read when on the go. It offers a qualitatively different experience from reading on a laptop or a phone.
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Thanks for themore grounded review. Did you happen to test the text to speech function? If so, can you give a review of the clarity of the audio, the voice inflection, etc.?
Bill
Erik John Bertel
While I am very interested in Kindle, I am still waiting for these books to be DRM free. It's just so much easier and "thought-free" when I don't have to worry about DRM and how I use something. The higher the resolution, the better it is too. We are nowhere near true 300-dpi but that's a technical limitation at this point.
Speaking of DRM-free, Amazon does have an awesome MP3 store that is DRM-free with a large selection and often good prices. It would be nice if they had the same thing with books.
On the note about Amazon, I recently came across an interesting table that details the discounts on Amazon. Maybe someone will find it useful too.
It is at <a href="http://www.uberi.com">http://www.uberi.com</a>
I may be missing something here, but a e-reader? Who cares? This would've been technologically cutting-edge in 1983. Yes, the Kindle device itself is very well put together, but I'm going to spend over $350 for a glorified hard drive with a screen that all it does is allow me to read text? Wow, glad I don't have the wool pulled over my eyes as much as all of you!!
If you are bringing a laptop, you can generally get away with just carrying a cable these days and charging off the USB. In any case, the Kindle 2's plug adapter (which the USB end plugs into to use a wall socket) is pretty minimal.
The e-paper technology (which is very different from reading an LCD) is definitely not 1983 vintage. But if it isn't worth it to you to carry a (currently pricey) dedicated reader device I'm not going to argue with you. As I said, I see the Kindle as something for some fairly specific use cases today.
- by svendsen7 March 2, 2009 4:14 PM PST
- I've had an original Kindle for a few months, and bought my son a K2 just recently. We're both voracious readers, and for us the immediate gratification of having a book as soon as you decide you want it is well worth the price of admission.
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(16 Comments)I do agree the Kindle is virtually worthless for magazines, but the regular subscriptions I already have for the ones I'm interested in work fine.