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	<title>John The Geek &#187; Tech Toys</title>
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		<title>Amazon Kindle &#8211; First Impressions</title>
		<link>http://johnthegeek.us/jtgblog/recommended/amazon-kindle-first-impressions/</link>
		<comments>http://johnthegeek.us/jtgblog/recommended/amazon-kindle-first-impressions/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Nov 2008 20:43:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John The Geek</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Hardware]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Recommended]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tech Toys]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Amazon Kindle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[electronic book]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kindle reader]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://johnthegeek.us/jtgblog/?p=71</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Amazon Kindle is basically an electronic book. Amazon calls it a &#8220;Wireless Reading Device.&#8221; The Kindle has been on the market about a year now. I recall looking at it when it was introduced and thinking it was a very cool idea. Well, now it&#8217;s a year later and I own a Kindle. And [...]]]></description>
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<p>The Amazon <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> is basically an electronic book.  Amazon calls it a &#8220;Wireless Reading Device.&#8221;  The <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> has been on the market about a year now.  I recall looking at it when it was introduced and thinking it was a very cool idea.</p>
<p>Well, now it&#8217;s a year later and I own a <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a>.  And it&#8217;s very cool.</p>
<p>The first thing you notice about a <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> is the &#8220;electronic paper&#8221; screen.  It&#8217;s essentially black-on-white and the detail is very sharp.  Text is crisp and very readable even in bright daylight outside.  There are a number of screen saver pictures that come with the Kindle and these are very detailed, looking very much like fine etchings.</p>
<p>Operation of the <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> is straightforward.  On the left side are Previous Page and Next Page buttons.  On the right, a Next Page button and a small Back button.  A small scroll wheel below the bottom right corner of the screen controls the cursor and menu system.  Push the wheel to click, roll it to scroll the cursor.</p>
<p>The <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> has a headphone jack for listening to music or audiobooks, a USB port for transferring content from your PC to the <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> and vice-versa, and an AC jack to recharge the battery.  At the bottom of the screen are indicators for remaining battery charge and wireless connectivity.</p>
<p>Battery life is impressive.  I&#8217;ve gotten 3-4 days from full charge to half discharged with it on 24/7.  I&#8217;ve not run the battery all the way down.  Amazon warns not to do that, but to keep it topped off.  I&#8217;m still a Ni-Cad guy so I can&#8217;t bring myself to plug it in every night, but when it gets to the halfway mark, I&#8217;ll charge it back up.</p>
<p>The <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> is on the Whispernet wireless network, aka Sprint.  I get 4-5 bars of signal strength everywhere I&#8217;ve been with it so far.  The wireless is fast.  A 1.5-2MB <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> book downloads in a few seconds.</p>
<p>The <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> has about 180MB of available internal memory, good for a hundred or so books in <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> format.  There is an SD card slot to add more storage.  I have a 4GB card in mine which will hold literally thousands of books and documents.  The Content Manager allows you to move items from internal memory to the SD card and vice-versa, or delete items altogether.</p>
<p>If you purchase a book from the <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> Store, it is delivered to your <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> via the wireless and also stored in your online Media Library at Amazon.  This means if you run out of space on your <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> and have to remove something to make more room, you can redownload it from the Media Library at any time when you have more available space.</p>
<p>In addition to the content you purchase from the <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> Store, you can convert various files to <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> format.  At the moment, Microsoft Word documents are supported along with MP3s, JPGs and a few others.  PDF documents are in the experimental stage.  I&#8217;ve converted several PDFs and the results have been varied, but this looks very promising.  One thing I intend to try soon is to convert a PDF to Word using Adobe Acrobat and then having the <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> convert the Word doc.</p>
<p>Conversion is simple.  Just email the file(s) you wish converted as attachments to the email address given you when you register your <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a>.  There are actually two addresses, one of which is free.  The difference is that the paid address delivers the converted document directly to the <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> via the wireless.  The free version stores the documents on Amazon&#8217;s servers and sends you an email with links to download them to your computer.  You then transfer the downloaded files to your <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> via USB cable.</p>
<p>As of this writing, the paid conversion address has not been charging the 10 cents they say they will charge for the service, but eventually I expect they will.  The conversion fee isn&#8217;t unreasonable and IMO is easily justified in the time savings avoiding the download/upload cycle.</p>
<p>Not all books are available in <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> format yet, but they&#8217;re certainly working on it.  If you find a book on Amazon that isn&#8217;t in <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> format, there&#8217;s a link next to it to tell the publisher you&#8217;d like them to publish it for the <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a>.  I&#8217;ve been doing that with computer books as some of my favorite publishers aren&#8217;t putting out <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> editions yet.</p>
<p>Purchasing content from the <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> store is straightforward.  You activate 1-Click ordering on your Amazon account and all your <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> purchases are processed via 1-Click.  There is a Search capability where you can search the <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> Store from your <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> by keying in search terms from the keyboard.  The <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> keyboard is a typical QWERTY layout, but the keys are very small buttons.  Not all the punctuation marks are present, but when you need one, you press the Sym key which brings up a menu of them.</p>
<p>Thankfully, the period, forward slash and @ symbols are on the keyboard.  Web surfing is available albeit in experimental mode and pretty much limited in usefulness to mostly-text web sites.</p>
<p>I leave my <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> on 24/7 by putting it in sleep mode.  If it&#8217;s idle with no activity for 10 minutes it will go into sleep mode by itself.  There is a two-key combination to put it to sleep or wake it up depending on its current state.  I also leave the wireless turned on although this probably consumes a bit more battery power than with it off.</p>
<p>In addition to books, you can purchase newspaper and blog subscriptions for your <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a>.  All the major newspapers are available and well over 1,000 blogs as of this writing.  I signed up for two sports blogs for 99 cents per month each.  Whenever anything new is posted to the blogs, it shows up as a new item on my <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a> home page immediately.</p>
<p>I definitely love my <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a>!  It&#8217;s allowing me to take reading material with me where it&#8217;s too cumbersome to carry a book or two and I can grab 10 or 15 minutes of reading as I get time during the day.  If all my computer books were somehow transferable to the <a href="http://johnthegeek.com/likes/kindle" rel="nofollow">Kindle</a>, I&#8217;d save a good percentage of the space in my home office!  Hey, it&#8217;s nice to dream.</p>
<p><a href="http://JohnTheGeek.com/blog">John The Geek</a></p>
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