11 November 2009

Kindle - Part 3

Ok, so, I’ve spent a bit of time with the Kindle eBook reader thingy, and I have the following observations.

It is an excellent bit of hardware and I actually read faster with it. For those of us with the attention span of a kitten, you may recognise the following scenario when you’re reading.
  1. Time to turn over the page
  2. Might as well make this time to turn over in bed
  3. Notice that the mug on the window sill is making the blind stick out asymmetrically
  4. Move mug
  5. Holding the mug reminds you that you are thirsty
  6. Get up to make tea
  7. Get frightened by killer dust-bunny in hallway
  8. Go back to bed
  9. Pick up book
  10. Re-read last page to remind you what had just happened (it’s been a distracting and trying time, after all)
  11. Time to turn page
  12. Might as well make this time to turn over
  13. Notice that Emergency Contact has been very quiet for a while, might want to prod or “help” her with something…
  14. Ad absurdum, infinitum, and finally, snorrum

With the electronic reader, there’s no real page turning. Your thumb just rests on the ‘next page’ button and you click when ready. I’ve even got it timed so that the very slight delay that the device exhibits as it retrieves the next page, is dealt with by hitting the button as you get to the last line on the display.

The battery life is not quite what they are promising I suspect. I don’t have a definitive answer on this yet, as you do get much better life out of the thing if you turn the wireless off when you’re not surfing, and I've only just started to do that reliably.

But here’s the kicker. Here’s where it’s all going to come tumbling down.

If they don’t make big headway into improving the library that is available to the owner, they are going to get me shouting in the streets.

I have been keeping a tally of the increase in the library, as reported by the device. You can see that it looks like a pretty good jump each day. (Over there under the search field.)

Yeah, well, with not much evidence other than to say that I’ve seen this on more than one occasion, I don’t think that six different versions of the one book should really count. It’s not like I get the choice between hardback and softback, colour or black and white.

And without wanting to thrust myself too deeply into the maw of the self flagellating beast that is America’s reading habits, is all of that religious content really necessary? And why isn’t it under fiction?

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