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Any Kindle owners on here?

#1

Covar

Covar

So since I bought my iPhone I've been enjoying reading on it using Stanza, and found it works really well. The thing I've been most happy about is that I've been reading a lot more than I normally would, I used to be a huge reader until about my Junior year of High School. Enjoying the iPhone for reading I started thinking of the Kindle (with it's new price cut) and have a few questions for you Kindle owners out there.

1) How do you like it?

2) Does it get a lot of use? How much compared to traditional books for you?

3) Can you use Project Gutenberg books on it still?

4) Will I get looks if I walk out of the Bathroom with it?


#2

Cajungal

Cajungal

I don't own one, but I have to say...

I know a guy who has one, and I was amazed at the screen. It doesn't cause me eyestrain the way I thought it would. I still probably wouldn't buy one, because I'd rather just deal with the bulk of a book, but it removed one of my big reasons for not wanting one.


#3

HowDroll

HowDroll

I have one! It's a first-generation one, granted, but I absolutely love it. I tend to read mostly classical lit (such as War and Peace) and fantasy (such as A Song of Ice and Fire), so not having to lug around 4" thick books is utterly amazing. I don't use it for school as much as I did last semester, but that's mostly because it's obnoxious to try writing papers with a Kindle when MLA citations haven't really caught up to the technology yet. However, at least 90-95% of my pleasure reading is done on the Kindle. The only exception I can think of in the last few months is Lolita by Vladimir Nabakov, and that's only because I wanted to take full advantage of the annotations. In fact, I read way more than I used to because of my Kindle; I used to read maybe once or twice a week before I bought it, and now I go to bed at least an hour early so that I can read before I go to sleep, and my Kindle's always in my purse in case I have some free time.

You can definitely download out-of-copyright books from Project Gutenberg, and if you're the type that doesn't care about that sort of thing, you can find pretty much any book pirated online. I'll generally buy books on the Kindle through Amazon unless the author/estate, for whatever weird reason, has issues with ebooks (such as J.K. Rowling) or if it's outrageously priced on Amazon (meaning as much as/more than the paperback version. Fuck that, I'm not spending a ridiculous amount of money on something that costs nothing for them to print and distribute.)

As to whether you'll get looks for walking out of the bathroom, I honestly can't say, but I doubt many people will know what the Kindle is if you get a case for it :rofl:

Someone might hijack the topic later and tell you about what happened with Amazon and 1984 a few months ago. Basically, Amazon gives you the power to publish books online, and a company started making money off of selling cheap out-of-copyright works. This wasn't a bad thing until they put Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm up--two works that are still in copyright in the US. Amazon yanked the books from their servers, and then people realized that the books started disappearing from their Kindles. The intertron went into a huge uproar about Amazon hacking into Kindles and deleting the books, but Amazon only deleted them server-side so that when the Kindles went to sync they found nothing there and deleted it accordingly. This can be solved in one simple way: when you buy a book from Amazon, save it to your computer. It is easy to do either through the Amazon webpage or by simply Ctrl+C'ing the documents folder on your Kindle, as I do. That way all of your page counts, notes, etc. will be saved, and no matter what Amazon does server-side, you'll have a backup. But yeah, whenever the Kindle's been brought up lately someone's cried about the 1984 incident, so now you know what it actually means to the owner of a Kindle.

But yes, long story short, I highly recommend it. If you can go to a Best Buy/Borders/wherever and see the e-ink display (albeit a Sony one) in action, you'll realize that CG is absolutely right. It's not backlit or anything--e-ink works almost like an etch-a-sketch, so the battery life is fantastic and it doesn't hurt your eyes at all. It'll certainly blow reading on the IPhone out of the water.


#4

Covar

Covar

Excellent information thank you.

I have no interest in piracy, but project gutenberg is an incredibly awesome idea, and definately something I would want to take advantage of (as opposed to paying $0.99 for it on the Kindle store).

I'm glad to hear that increased your reading, my biggest worry is that I would buy a Kindle and then lose interest in whatever I was reading, like I had done the last 2 times I bought books (Tale of Two Cities and 4:15 from Paddington).

The 1984 situation doesn't bother me. Quite frankly I think Amazon did the right thing, and it's not like they never apologized, or didn't offer refunds and then some.

Once again thanks for the information on the Kindle. It's definitely something I'm going to consider down the line.


#5

Dave

Dave

I'd own one if it weren't a bajillion dollars.


#6

Covar

Covar

price just dropped to $259 hence my sudden interest. Although I might just wait for the Kindle DX to drop.


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