BenBurch
Gatekeeper of The Left
I like my Amazon cover because of the parasitically-powered book light.
Mine is named "Don't Panic"
News item that should effect those of you in the EU;
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...s-publishers-in-ebook-price-fixing-probe.html
Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings is being sold separately for $9.99 each. I have multiple version of this book in hardback and paperback and even an electronic version I typed out on my own. I'd only want it for reading every now and then, but they're charging a just-released-premium prices for this series.

I would never try to type a whole book even though I'm a pretty fast typist. I have OCR'd quite a few of them - the ones that I've read multiple times and plan to read more multiple times and aren't avaiable in a Kindle version.
Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit were some of the first I bought in Kindle format.
I would never try to type a whole book even though I'm a pretty fast typist. I have OCR'd quite a few of them - the ones that I've read multiple times and plan to read more multiple times and aren't avaiable in a Kindle version.
Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit were some of the first I bought in Kindle format.
I would never try to type a whole book even though I'm a pretty fast typist. I have OCR'd quite a few of them - the ones that I've read multiple times and plan to read more multiple times and aren't avaiable in a Kindle version.
Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit were some of the first I bought in Kindle format.
Speaking of this, have you converted anything to a PDF for reading on the Kindle? How bad/good is it?
Does anyone know what happens on the screen during that micro-second when the page turns? Looks like the new page is momentarily displayed in negative...
Yes, with mixed results. I have some documents for work that I keep on it in pdf format, but I try not to have to read them on it. I tried converting them two different ways, with Calibre and by sending them to my RoboTimbo@free.kindle.com email address with "convert" as the subject and neither was really satisfactory.
It really depends on the formatting. If it's just text, without a lot of headings, footers, mixed fonts, tables, graphics, you should be pretty good. If it has a lot of the above, it is an exercise in frustration.
The Kindle can read pdf documents natively without conversion but that also can be frustrating. The text usually is so small and faint, you need a magnifying glass to read it. There's built in zoom in the Kindle for pdfs but that's not convenient. I'd like to get the DX just for pdfs because of its larger screen.
Kindle supports wireless delivery of unprotected Microsoft Word (DOC, DOCX), PDF, HTML, TXT, RTF, JPEG, GIF, PNG, BMP, PRC and MOBI files. Some complex PDF and DOCX files might not format correctly on your Kindle.