Quote:
Originally Posted by delphin
Sorry you thought so, but no one should buy a Kindle expecting a highly sophisticated, polished, well thought out product.
Aside from simple-stupid page-forward, page-back reading, I found nearly every element of the Kindle's interface to be poorly implemented and awkward (even given the limitations of it's non-touch-screen design.)
You can't even set the clock without web-access, not because the Kindle can't keep time without contacting a web server, it can, but because the Kindle STUPIDLY hides this menu on a setup screen that is not accessible until the device is registered. There is no real technical reason that this limitation should exist - it shouldn't be there . . . It just is.
Between the features that are so poorly implemented as to be barely usable, like the browser and MP3 player, and the totally unnecessary ridiculous "can't get there from here" navigation issues . . . Well I'm sorry, the Kindle software is just not very well written.
So I apologize, I should not have said that the Kindle could be called, "a 'mature' software design ONLY BY 1980's standards," what I should have said was that the Kindle would have been considered a POOR DESIGN EVEN BY 1980's STANDARDS.
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Can't set the clock?? You're describing a K2...have you used a K3 at all? The clock can be precisely set. If you put an MP3 in the Audible folder, it has the same interface as an Audible book. It has very precise controls. The alt commands are merely shortcuts, by the way. Everything is accessible by the menus.
Edit: I just noticed your issue about having to register the device before the time could be set. My Kindle was registered before I got it out of the box so I can't attest to that point.