Anyone with half a brain would have scored a Dell mini 9 with Ubuntu on Friday for $200.
Instead of a braindead limited computer, you can get a full computer...which by the way, also LETS YOU READ TEXT ON IT JUST LIKE EVERY OTHER COMPUTER IN THE UNIVERSE!!!
There are a lot of free "public domain" books for Kindle on Amazon -- you can sort by price to see the free ones. I downloaded this one called "365 Foreign Dishes" by "unknown" to try it out.
Why would you pay for "Classics" when you can download Stanza for free and also download all of those books for free from project Gutenberg? Apple is obnoxious for pushing Classics so hard...
@4 - No, it's not. I haven't made up my mind about the Kindle yet, but there's no question it's a very different (and more book-like) experience than reading anything on an iPhone.
The iphone screen is too small for much reading for a majority of people. Buying and lugging around a cheap laptop is no replacement for a book.
That said, the kindle is far too expensive. If it were $150 I'd have one myself and so would a lot of people. At that price students might buy two (cause sometimes you need two books open at once.)
I agree with most of the "cons," although the first two stopped bothering me once I switched to a smaller font size and dimmed my screen brightness a little. Looking forward to improvements in the next version.
@4, I don't think the iPhone app makes the Kindle obsolete--the Kindle is great for extended reading at home (where I've run out of bookshelf space), but the iPhone app is easier to carry around for reading during lunch at work, while traveling, etc. I plan on using them both a lot.
Oddly, my Kindle for iPhone is NOT justifying text; it's flush left, which I like. See my example in an article I wrote. I wonder if it's book by book.
@8 - Yeah, changing the font size does help for sure, but I'm blind as a bat, so it makes it even more awkward to read on the phone. Agree also with the brightness, but I don't want to change my system-wide screen brightness just for this app. Amazon makes good software, and I'm sure they'll improve it.
"Can't shop the Kindle store from within the app."
From Apple's list of rules about what an app can and can't do...
"3.3.3 Without Apple’s prior written approval, an Application may not provide, unlock or enable additional features or functionality through distribution mechanisms other than the App Store."
Ah, just checked with a friend: The flush left/ragged right versus full justification setting is chosen by a publisher, and it's a per-book item. Stupid idea to justify text across narrow widths.
@17 - I have a Kindle, and I still buy books from neighborhood bookstores, in no less quantity than before.
But really, computers and the Internet are the real knives in the heart of the bookstore and countless other cherished businesses. Please stop using computers and the Internet.
^^ Before that TV was the stake in the hear of the neighbourhood bookstore, and before that Cinema, and Radio. When was this time that neighbourhood bookstores were the heart, and who for?
@17 Astonishing that people *still* fail to realize that progress happens. The automobile was a knife to the heart of the town blacksmith, and the blacksmith was the heart of the town. But towns adapted. Perhaps you should as well?
The mystery is why the Kindle app is only available in the US. The Kindle device being US-only makes sense due to the wireless and magazine subs, etc., but why limit the iPhone Kindle app to the US?
The publishers? They haven't objected to eReader and Stanza on the iPhone (and eReader/MobiPocket/MS-Reader, etc. on other devices) giving consumers worldwide access to tens of thousands of in-copyright works from many online (mostly US-based) ebook retailers. Now that Fictionwise/eReader.com are owned by B&N are the publishers suddenly going to insist that eReader/MobiPocket/MS-Reader etc. only be downloadable by US residents and US ebook retailers only sell to US residents? Seems unlikely. The copyright territory game has been well and truly lost with ebooks already, piggy's not coming back.
So why are the Kindle app and Kindle ebooks not available worldwide like every other ebook and reader app?
The Kindle 3 has begun to reach readers and already Kindle, Nook are causing a immense seismic shift. They have the first major book release that is selling IVA more ebooks than hardcovers
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Instead of a braindead limited computer, you can get a full computer...which by the way, also LETS YOU READ TEXT ON IT JUST LIKE EVERY OTHER COMPUTER IN THE UNIVERSE!!!
Here is the smallest text size (I don't think it's too small): http://i39.tinypic.com/20sa98y.jpg
Here is the largest text size: http://i40.tinypic.com/2qlznyh.jpg
It's kind of annoying, but I'll probably buy a book in the future...
That said, the kindle is far too expensive. If it were $150 I'd have one myself and so would a lot of people. At that price students might buy two (cause sometimes you need two books open at once.)
@4, I don't think the iPhone app makes the Kindle obsolete--the Kindle is great for extended reading at home (where I've run out of bookshelf space), but the iPhone app is easier to carry around for reading during lunch at work, while traveling, etc. I plan on using them both a lot.
From Apple's list of rules about what an app can and can't do...
"3.3.3 Without Apple’s prior written approval, an Application may not provide, unlock or enable additional features or functionality through distribution mechanisms other than the App Store."
Please consider that before purchasing this doohickey.
But really, computers and the Internet are the real knives in the heart of the bookstore and countless other cherished businesses. Please stop using computers and the Internet.
I love Kindle for iPhone. I love Kindle. I love books. They each get me to the same places, just via different paths.
The publishers? They haven't objected to eReader and Stanza on the iPhone (and eReader/MobiPocket/MS-Reader, etc. on other devices) giving consumers worldwide access to tens of thousands of in-copyright works from many online (mostly US-based) ebook retailers. Now that Fictionwise/eReader.com are owned by B&N are the publishers suddenly going to insist that eReader/MobiPocket/MS-Reader etc. only be downloadable by US residents and US ebook retailers only sell to US residents? Seems unlikely. The copyright territory game has been well and truly lost with ebooks already, piggy's not coming back.
So why are the Kindle app and Kindle ebooks not available worldwide like every other ebook and reader app?
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Breast Implants Price in Asia
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