You people anger me. My Kindle arrived yesterday.
So did mine! So far, I'm loving it. The display is amazing. It's my first experience with an e-reader, so I have nothing to compare it to, other than lcd displays and so forth, so I am truly impressed with this display. It makes you
want to look at it.
I've been trying to get acquainted with some of its features. Loaded about 20 free books, some "purchased" from Amazon, some obtained from Gutenberg and the like, some from other sources converted with Calibre (can't say enough about Calibre--if you have an e-reader, you NEED Calibre. It's free, and it's awesome. There is no reason not to try it).
Readability is very customizable. When you press the 'Aa' button, you can choose from: 8 different point sizes; 3 typeface styles (regular, condensed, and sans serif), 3 line spacing options; 3 words-per-line choices; and four different screen rotation orientations.
I actually
like the "cat's tongue" feel to the keys (very apt description, Phrost, btw!). My fingers tend to slip off of such small keys, and these give me a good tactile sensation of which key I'm pressing. I think the 5-way navigation widget is a bit small, and I find myself pressing it with the thumbnail rather than with the pad of my thumb.
I like some of the subtle touches such as the random sleep screen images. Very nice. Everything about this device says "I may be hi-tech, but I'm still a book." I love the graphite shell color.
Not one, but two built-in, full text dictionaries! Holy crap.
It connected to my wi-fi with no problem. (I actually got the 3G model--with the service being free, I figure it's worth the extra $50 for that capability). I sent several files to my @free.kindle.com address. Within a few minutes, there they were (and yes, the books I had ordered before I received the Kindle were on it when I turned it on!).
Only tried one pdf file, a map. Displays rather nicely and can be magnified to a large scale, provided the original file is large to begin with. Moving around the page is a bit dodgy, though. Haven't tried a pdf with text yet. I report back when I've experimented with more pdfs.
Tried the Read Text (or Text-to-Voice or whatever it's called) feature. Interesting. It's like your GPS is reading to you.
The browser is interesting. Not ready to duplicate BenBurch's experiment of posting to message boards with it, yet!
Made a couple discoveries:
1) If your book doesn't have a cover, download an image from the web (convert it to grayscale it you want to reduce file size), edit the metadata for the book in Calibre, and load the cover. You'll have the cover on your Kindle.
2) When browsing the Kindle Store, while you're on a description page for a book, instead of moving the cursor over the "more" link and then clicking on it, just press the page forward button and it will take you to the full book description.
Don't have many complaints yet:
--I wish there where two shift keys. Typing A or S is a little tricky.
--Html files are cumbersome to convert. Amazon sends you a file with all the html code in it. Calibre didn't work too well, either, at least on the files I tried. The text seemed to be all in a table or something, so I have to copy and paste the text to an rtf and send that. That worked.
One more thing. I still love real books. Have lots of them; intend to keep them; will undoubtedly buy more of them. No one is saying e-readers are superior to printed books or that books should go away. The e-reader is fun and has its uses, and it's not really that expensive. Newsflash:
you can have both.
