Revisiting the Amazon Kindle e-Book Reader - Page 4

Blurb—Sometimes, especially after I’ve put down a book for awhile, I forget why I started reading it in the first place, and the back cover (or the blurb) synopsis helps remind me of what the book’s about.  It's something lacking on the Kindle, and something I greatly miss.  It's a little thing, but (for me) it's the one thing that would really make Kindle books "real" for me.  Silly, huh?

Bottom line:  It's still a totally worthwhile electronic gizmo.  I rank it in importance after my laptop and my Blackberry (and actually ahead of my iPod – though just slightly).

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Article Author: Barbara Barnett

Follow Barbara on Twitter. Barbara Barnett grew up on politics and pop culture. Her professional life has been eclectic, because her left brain doesn't know what her right brain really wants. Her real passions are writing, music, reading--and House.

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  • 1 - abhi

    Jul 13, 2008 at 8:17 pm

    hi barbara -
    we run a kindle blog and i've just started a books and kindle based social network (the alpha release is july 21st however we've been letting people sign up since saturday night) and would appreciate it if you'd join and help build the community. it's at amazonkindle.ning.com.
    also there are 3 free kindles to be won during the alpha and beta stages (basically one free kindle every month).
    thanks
    abhi

  • 2 - Barbara Barnett

    Jul 13, 2008 at 8:31 pm

    cool Thanks for the invite!

  • 3 - Dana Vinicoff

    Jul 14, 2008 at 1:38 pm

    Hi, Barbara,

    Your experience with the Kindle is very much like mine - down to the piles of books and, perhaps, the purchase of the book by Rabbi Donin. May you continue to enjoy and learn from it.

    Dana

  • 4 - Barbara Barnett

    Jul 14, 2008 at 2:02 pm

    Indeed, Dana. It is Rabbi Donin's book! The possibilities for the Kindle are endless as the techonlogy allows: textbooks without destroying trees (and ruining our children's backs!). Thanks for stopping by and enjoy.

  • 5 - Ruvy

    Jul 14, 2008 at 2:26 pm

    Barbara,

    The way I figure it, a Kindle Reader would cost at least 1,200 shekels if we had someone bring it in the country for us. That's a lot of scratch. But, a similar reader put out by Google that would give us access to the university libraries that are being digitized would be worth the money.

    Excellent review!

  • 6 - Barbara Barnett

    Jul 14, 2008 at 3:22 pm

    Thanks for popping in, Ruvy. It would be amazing to have a device--this one or any--allow us access to University library collections.

    The Kindle is expensive, but no more so than the other readers. And so much better than reading downloaded books on a phone, PDA or computer. Much easier on the eyes!

  • 7 - Ple

    Jul 23, 2008 at 8:58 am

    I have been one of the beta testers for this product. At first I thought "Who needs this when you can read a book?" Wrong! I will never forget the Sunday evening when my wife and I (also a beta tester) were sitting in the living room when our brains shifted. This device represents a new way to access information. If it was only a "book reader" I doubt Amazon would have been interested. It downloads new material, books, newspapers, magazines, blogs,etc. nearly instantly. The search function reviews all the books on the device plus the web. I love it. I can read a book easily look up a word I don't know in the dictionary and then find other related material in my library or on the web. It is easy to use and light weight.

    If you want a book reader it does this well, as does the Sony Reader and other devices. If you want to experience a new way of obtaining, reading, and accessing information, this is the new wave.

  • 8 - Barbara Barnett

    Jul 23, 2008 at 9:41 am

    You are right, PLE about the difference between the Kindle and all other e-book readers. It's all stocked up and ready to go with me to Alaska! I would normally bring 5 books with me for a cruise (more given the 6 hour flight duration to even get to the cruise). that's a lot of extra weight I'm NOT carrying. And if I feel I want something else--or a peek at the New York Times when I'm in port, I can buy it right then and there.

  • 9 - bliffle

    Jul 23, 2008 at 11:45 am

    I've been told that the screen is very readable, the best, according to some. It's readable in sunlight, too.

    I'd like to have a Kindle as long as I could load it with my own content, a lot of which may come from Project Gutenburg, etc. If it had an ability to play some sounds through an earbud, that would be nice.

  • 10 - Barbara Barnett

    Jul 23, 2008 at 1:23 pm

    Hi Bliffle,

    reading in sunlight is not an issue at all (it's not backlit). It has a built in mp3 player and a headphone jack. And an SD slot as well. You can read word files and some others as well.

  • 11 - Marco

    Jun 24, 2009 at 3:31 am

    Kindle is definitely a good device with nice features and design, but I think Sony PRS approach is more user friendly in terms of content distribution. They have quite big ebooks library (and +500'000 more after alliance with Google) and aren't bounded to a local WiFi like WhisperNet.

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