No way would I rather read on an iPad.
― Kindle hardware designer, Thursday, August 12, 2010 6:49 PM
― am0n, Friday, 13 August 2010 01:10 (fifteen years ago)
haha
― perfectamente borracho (admrl), Friday, 13 August 2010 01:12 (fifteen years ago)
I totally see the appeal of a Kindle. I've never seen an iPad though
― perfectamente borracho (admrl), Friday, 13 August 2010 01:13 (fifteen years ago)
http://www.cartoonstock.com/lowres/hsc1792l.jpg
― ('_') (omar little), Friday, 13 August 2010 01:13 (fifteen years ago)
downloaded a few free books from project gutenberg for plane ride tomorrow to test it out. kindle has two flights to win me over.
― kate78, Friday, 13 August 2010 01:19 (fifteen years ago)
I've been using PDAs for reading books since 2003, going from a Franklin eBookman to a Palm Zire to an iPod Touch, and I'm really not sure why people think they need dedicated hardware for this sort of thing.
― Christine Green Leafy Dragon Indigo, Friday, 13 August 2010 01:23 (fifteen years ago)
reading on an iphone is the absolute worst
― pies. (gbx), Friday, 13 August 2010 02:00 (fifteen years ago)
I like it. Even better with iPhone 4.
― Jeff, Friday, 13 August 2010 03:12 (fifteen years ago)
Massively so. Text on the retina display looks like its on glowing paper. No jaggies, nothing.
REAL BOOKS ARE STILL BETTER.
this is seriously my only hold-out— i won't ever fucking buy one of these things. books belong on paper.
― a repulsive person and/or a repulsive sphincter (the table is the table), Friday, 13 August 2010 08:33 (5 hours ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
I thought ebooks were the stupidest thing ever until two weeks ago when I got my iPhone 4 and actually tried reading one. Now I'm so impressed that I'm about to buy a dedicated ebook reader.
― I, ahh, give the, ahh, the Jackson Jive, ahh, a ten (Autumn Almanac), Friday, 13 August 2010 03:58 (fifteen years ago)
Can you explain the appeal?
What kind of reading habits do you have?
What do you read?
― perfectamente borracho (admrl), Friday, 13 August 2010 04:03 (fifteen years ago)
Sorry, I thought the multiple disclosures up-thread had me covered. I also own an iPhone 4, but I don't read books on it.
― schwantz, Friday, 13 August 2010 04:13 (fifteen years ago)
So what is that for? corporate espionage?
― life behind bras (admrl), Friday, 13 August 2010 04:20 (fifteen years ago)
Dropping calls. *rimshot*
― schwantz, Friday, 13 August 2010 04:27 (fifteen years ago)
I have the Kindle app on my android phone, but reading the e-ink display of the Kindle doesn't give me eyestrain like the phone display. The larger display of the Kindle with a larger font size cuts way down on the motion sickness I usually get reading on the bus, while reading on the phone makes it worse.
― Jaq, Friday, 13 August 2010 04:28 (fifteen years ago)
I would install reader on my pathetic iPhone 3, but there is jelly on the screen that I can't seem to get off.
― life behind bras (admrl), Friday, 13 August 2010 04:29 (fifteen years ago)
I can still answer calls though
With the iPhone, try setting your reader app to display white or colored text on black--try green or, better yet, amber. This should ease the eyestrain a bit. (And use Night Mode when you use Zing Touch.)
― Christine Green Leafy Dragon Indigo, Friday, 13 August 2010 04:36 (fifteen years ago)
(I meant Dark Theme, of course.)
― Christine Green Leafy Dragon Indigo, Friday, 13 August 2010 04:37 (fifteen years ago)
I have a K2, and only use it while traveling. It has two purchased texts, and about 300 classics for which I paid nothing, and I hope it will spare me from having to build more shelving for a few years.
Recommended hotlinked directories of public domain and creative commons works (download URLs for kindle):
http://www.feedbooks.com/kindleguidehttp://freekindlebooks.org/MagicCatalog/magiccatalog.html (download the mobi edition)
― ὑστέρησις (Sanpaku), Friday, 13 August 2010 04:40 (fifteen years ago)
Dude! Dark theme rules! Thanks for the tip. And of course the REAL answer to why I have an iPhone is Zing.
― schwantz, Friday, 13 August 2010 04:41 (fifteen years ago)
The main appeal for me right now is travel. In a few weeks I'll be in the middle of nowhere for a month, flying all over the place and with a reasonable amount of spare time on my hands. I can't lug around half a dozen books due to luggage weight restrictions. The two ebook readers I'm eyeing off atm weigh under 250g, which is less than two ordinary paperbacks, and their e-ink screens last ages on a single charge (important coz I'll have unreliable electricity most of the time).
― I, ahh, give the, ahh, the Jackson Jive, ahh, a ten (Autumn Almanac), Friday, 13 August 2010 04:44 (fifteen years ago)
I carry my iPod everywhere I go; I'm sitting on the toilet right now. I still have a bunch of 'books' (many, if not most, are short stories/novellas) from a Fictionwise buying binge that ended a few months ago, and I'm working through them at the rate of 30,000 words a week, a very slow rate for me--I was getting through 50,000 words during a 12-hour work shift for a while there.
― Christine Green Leafy Dragon Indigo, Friday, 13 August 2010 05:03 (fifteen years ago)
http://maestro-sec.com/blogs/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/xbox-360-toilet.jpg
― life behind bras (admrl), Friday, 13 August 2010 05:09 (fifteen years ago)
Can you explain the appeal?Is like the difference between having CDs and having MP3s. Can do so much I can't easily with books: I can take notes and highlights and have them automatically pulled out into an index or transferred to Mac for searching/reference. Can search back through text to find first mention of characters etc. Can pull up definition of unfamiliar words with one press. Can read in the dark. Can see what other readers have been highlighting in the same text (Amazon could take this sort of stuff to amazing places. Collaborative marginalia. Author's notes and clarifications).
Also, like MP3s, now have novels I'm reading *everywhere*. In an unexpected queue or taxi? Have *all* the novels I'm reading in my pocket.
What kind of reading habits do you have?Read a lot, daily.
What do you read?Fiction, non-fiction and philosophy.
― stet, Friday, 13 August 2010 12:38 (fifteen years ago)
starting to get kind of tempted by the Kindle :/ can't afford it right now anyways but might ask for one for xmas or something
― congratulations (n/a), Monday, 16 August 2010 15:22 (fifteen years ago)
i didn't realise this thing was as cheap as it was, now i'm considering this.
― F-Unit (Ste), Monday, 16 August 2010 18:34 (fifteen years ago)
make it under a hundred and i'll buy one
― this isn't STRAWBERRY 0_o it's RAWBERRY (forksclovetofu), Monday, 16 August 2010 18:40 (fifteen years ago)
stet which reader do you prefer?
― cutty, Tuesday, 17 August 2010 23:44 (fifteen years ago)
Don't have an actual Kindle, the ones I've played with are nice but the flash, slow refresh and keyboard bug me. On the iPad Kindle app >>>> iBooks app in nearly every way except some of the source material, which is typeset really shoddily by Amazon and better by Apple)
― stet, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 00:09 (fifteen years ago)
I agree.
― Jeff, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 01:31 (fifteen years ago)
I have never used a Kindle, but moving four bookshelves of books recently made me realize how nice it would be to have one.
― Abbbottt, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 02:54 (fifteen years ago)
yeah, the price is getting there. I do appreciate the physical aspect of books and piles of books taking over my apartment, but...
1. Would be nice to be able to set the type to a nice size for reading (having a harder and harder time with small type in some books)2. Integrated dictionary, right?3. Free, portable, access to the bulk of classic lit via Project Gutenberg etc
― Jeff LeVine, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 05:04 (fifteen years ago)
the price is right now (I'd prefer £99 obv but I'm not going to begrudge that extra £10) as is the form (much more attractive/less unseemly looking now)
srsly considering buying one
― cozen, Monday, 30 August 2010 18:57 (fifteen years ago)
apparently the magazine subscriptions (economist eg) aren't great value for money tho, which is disappointing
Meh, I think I read two "books" on the Kindle. I have an ipad but doubt I'll read books on there. I prefer to read actual books to be honest.
― Nathalie (stevienixed), Tuesday, 31 August 2010 11:57 (fifteen years ago)
I bought a Kobo and I'm stoked. Using it daily. Already churned through 1.5 books (not counting half of Under the Dome because it was rubbish). Obv I'll read paper books again but the reduced weight and having the option to read stuff I can't get hold of in the shops is wonderful.
― The Corangamite Manoeuvre (Autumn Almanac), Wednesday, 1 September 2010 08:57 (fifteen years ago)
Took ipad on holiday and it was superb compared to my old case o' books. IPad screen is shit in sunlight though, so might just get a Kindle after all.
― stet, Wednesday, 1 September 2010 14:28 (fifteen years ago)
Not aimed at you stet but why do people refer to Apple products as though they were people? 'I am using iPad', 'I left iPhone on the bus', 'I have pushed iPod Shuffle up my bottom' etc etc.
― The Corangamite Manoeuvre (Autumn Almanac), Wednesday, 1 September 2010 23:43 (fifteen years ago)
I was just being lazy there, but it's also official Apple style - you see it in all their copy, it's very rare to see "The iPhone is", it's almost always "iPhone is". Started with iPod.
― stet, Wednesday, 1 September 2010 23:51 (fifteen years ago)
hah that grammar directive actually comes directly from Apple itself. apple views i-N as strong, proper nouns so they don't need articles or possessive pronouns.
― shorn_blond.avi (dayo), Wednesday, 1 September 2010 23:52 (fifteen years ago)
xp
I see the point you're both making but it's more than a little bit creepy.
― The Corangamite Manoeuvre (Autumn Almanac), Thursday, 2 September 2010 00:10 (fifteen years ago)
oh it definitely is
― shorn_blond.avi (dayo), Thursday, 2 September 2010 00:10 (fifteen years ago)
Tonight some bloke ran headfirst into me and sent my Kobo flying. At this stage I don't know which will die first, my Kobo or this bloke when I find him.
― The Corangamite Manoeuvre (Autumn Almanac), Thursday, 2 September 2010 08:46 (fifteen years ago)
I purchased a Kindle Wi-Fi for under $150 US, and Kindle with Calibre is freaking fantastic. I dream of something that I can read Comics and PDFs on (Kindle's PDF support is still meh), but I can carry a library of a couple hundred books with me wherever I go. It's changing my consumption habits in almost the same way my first iPod did. There are so many wonderful-and-free-and-legal books available, and with Calibre it's trivial to put whatever you want onto your Kindle. The eyestrain caused by trying to read books on computer (or iPhone, iPad or DS) is no joke, but the Kindle (and I assume the Nook, Kobo, and Sony eReader) just don't have those issues. Have read probably 20 books on the thing so far, and have only owned it for a couple of months. I'm a complete convert.
― J, Tuesday, 16 November 2010 22:59 (fifteen years ago)
100%. I used my Kobo on a load of dusty bus rides through southern Africa and found it immensely pleasurable. Also saved me the weight of the books I read (I was already nudging the luggage allowance as it was).
― 14d. South African cleric (2,2) (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 16 November 2010 23:11 (fifteen years ago)
Very much anticipating the book sharing feature for Kindle that starts sometime next year, and wondering if it will work between international users.
― Jaq, Tuesday, 16 November 2010 23:31 (fifteen years ago)
my brother got me one of these
i'v ebeen using it all weke and i really like it!
― google street jew (s1ocki), Tuesday, 16 November 2010 23:35 (fifteen years ago)
and i've clearly become illiterate.
what is the point of calibre
― google street jew (s1ocki), Tuesday, 16 November 2010 23:38 (fifteen years ago)