12-21-2010, 08:04 PM | #1 |
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K3 up-to-date pros and cons you share
Hi,
I have lost my kindle, ordered a new one, hovever it will be delevered no sooner then february. I just think, whether is it really worth waiting for the international shipment (us probably would be shipped immediately) or just buy iPad... There was lots of problems with K2 in my perspective, the browser, the content organizing and searching, PDF's very limited support... yea, but the eInk was quite new experience. Incredible in sunny days, rather awful in the evening. What do you think? Thinking out of the box what would you go for if you have lost your kindle today? What are the disapointments about K3 which still exists out there? |
12-21-2010, 08:16 PM | #2 |
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I am surprised for you the kindle is an either/or with the ipad, the two are very different devices: if you want something to read books on, the kindle is definitely superior, if you want a tablet computer, then the ipad is a slam-dunk (although you definitely are paying the early adopter 'tax' on it, not to mention that it's a 1.0 product at the moment), yes, you can browse on the kindle and you can read books on the ipad, but IMHO they are not the 'primary' uses for either device.
It's like somebody asking "the pickup truck I ordered is taking too long to come in, I will buy a minivan instead", yes, you can drive places with both vehicles, but they aren't exactly interchangeable for their primary uses... |
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12-21-2010, 08:37 PM | #3 |
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Why not a Nook Color? It has some of the bells & whistles of the iPad, like color, internet access, and being able to read magazines, but is much cheaper and lighter.
Personally, I'd wait for the k3, but that's because I'm too spoiled by the lightness of the device to be tempted by anything else out there right now. |
12-21-2010, 09:00 PM | #4 |
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If you are reading pdfs, then no, I wouldn't get another Kindle.
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12-21-2010, 09:48 PM | #5 |
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Second on the PDF reading, as most pdf are formatted for A4 pages and not A6 or B7, and the panning and zoom is a little annoying
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12-21-2010, 11:09 PM | #6 | |
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Quote:
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12-28-2010, 04:39 PM | #7 |
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Thanks all for your replies I thought for a while about it and came to coclusion that indeed kindle is superior ereader for books - mobi and azw. PDF and browser is just a bait if you are undecided, free 3G as well However these addons could be usefull from time to time. I decided to wait for my new kindle whilst doing myself a christmas gift - a new shiny toy named iPad
I am using my iPad for a little time now for reading PDFs and it is a way better than Kindle for this task. The big difference is bookmarks and notes navigation. Well I do not read from top to end most of my PDFs, these are reference guides which needs to be easily opened in several locations at once. |
12-29-2010, 01:03 AM | #8 |
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One of the coolest things about the kindle besides it being an e-reader is the fact that you get free 3g internet. try getting that with anything else these days...
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12-29-2010, 08:28 AM | #9 |
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There is no Swiss Army knife for readers. The Kindle is, first and foremost, a text reader. The iPad is a color device for web access and, if you don't mind the small screen, a decent PDF reader. It is, for me, simply too heavy and uncomfortable to use for reading over any period of time. I am spoiled for internet access because I hate tiny, inadequate screens for PDF and web page displays and I simply cannot use the little toy keyboards on such devices. I know the current rage for iPads and such, but for me, there is no gap between my laptop and my Kindle to be filled with one.
I never use the browser in my K3 (I don't even know if it works or not) and I never use 3G because I have better tools for doing so. The K3 is near-perfect because of it's superior screen in normal reading light, its light weight (7.9 oz.), comfortable size, reasonable price, and its multiple-week recharge cycle. |
12-29-2010, 09:41 AM | #10 |
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IMO, one of the best features of the Kindle is Whispernet. With that and Calibre I always have access to library no matter where I am (as long as I leave my PC on).
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12-29-2010, 09:52 AM | #11 |
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Whispernet is handy, but I seldom if ever use it directly from the Kindle. I always download books to my Kindle4PC on the big computer, save the download on a backup drive, and then sideload the books into the K3. With the large RAM in the K3, and a 3,000 book capacity, there is no reason anyone should run out of reading material while on vacation or away from the computer. I view 3G the same way -- I just don't need it. But it could be very handy for anyone who, in this day and age, does not have a computer!
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12-29-2010, 10:43 AM | #12 |
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Can you really do that? I thought the Amazon DRM tied them directly to a device, even if that "device" is the Kindle4PC. I don't think I can copy a book from my K3 to my computer and read it with my Kindle4PC.
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12-29-2010, 10:48 AM | #13 |
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Wispernet is actually really nice because you can get samples of books before you buy them. I love it.
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12-29-2010, 10:52 AM | #14 |
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You are absolutely right - Amazon's DRM mechanism is tied to a device, not to an account. You can't do what the previous poster states unless you remove the DRM from the book.
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12-29-2010, 10:55 AM | #15 |
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Any book that you download in "Kindle" or MOBI format will go into K4PC if you so direct it. If you obtain your books from sources other than Amazon which do not have DRM-protection, or if you download those few non-DRM books from Amazon, they may be dragged into the Kindle \document folder and read on the Kindle. If you move a bit to the 'dark side' you can remove the DRM from the Amazon DRM'd books and then move them. But you don't really need to do that since any book in your K4PC application will appear as an "Archive" book on the Kindle -- assuming you have both registered with Amazon on the same account. As with so many others here, I usually remove the DRM for the sole purpose of storing them in a more 'universal' format for the future. Who knows how long DRM will be readable?
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