This is BrainLog, a blog by Dan Sanderson. Older entries, from October 1999 through August 2010, are preserved for posterity, but are no longer maintained. See the front page and newer entries.

Entries tagged “kindle”

November 28, 2007

Another hands-on review of the Amazon Kindle e-book reader. I like the note about not having to hold it in your hands while reading. Having to hold pages open is a design issue with paper books that doesn't get talked about much. It's not a huge win for e-book readers, but it's something. This reviewer even tries reading while on a treadmill, with success.

Also good to hear that the Kindle supports the Mobi e-book format, and that PDFs can be converted to Mobi pretty easily. I'm assuming it's not a pixel-perfect conversion of the layout, but it's something.

November 23, 2007

PC World's review of the Amazon Kindle. Nothing surprising based on already published specs, though it did answer a couple of my questions: You can indeed shuttle files between the device and a PC using the SD card or the USB cable, but those files will only be in either plaintext (including your highlighted clips) or their proprietary AZW format, so you can back up your purchases locally. You can also re-download purchased files any time.

Wired has an e-book reader comparison chart that reminds us there are several readers on the market with similar dimensions and technologies (e-paper), but also support PDF and cost less. Amazon's free cellular data and store are still a big deal in this light, but if what you want is a way to carry a stack of academic papers and free PDFs around, there are options. I'd be curious to know more about the Jinke HanLin eBook reader V3.

One thing I keep thinking about regarding the Kindle is how Amazon can promote Kindle versions alongside paper versions. My Amazon MP3 Store addiction has everything to do with the ability to discover that CDs I want are available as MP3s for substantially less money and substantially more convenience. Hopefully the "substantially less money" bit will eventually apply to the Kindle.