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#16 | |||
Provocateur
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Columbus, OH
Device: Kindle Touch, Kindle 2, Kindle DX, iPhone 3GS
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You open a book, hit Menu, then hit Table of Contents. (The TOC is inside the book, so sometimes you can just page forward to it. Or sometimes you start inside the book after the TOC, and have to page back to it. But by using Menu you can always get there, if it has one.) You go to a page which lists varioues entries, generally chapters. You use the 5-way controller to arrow down to the chapter you want to jump to and click on it, like a hyperlink.
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Not on the Kindle 2. (Except via TOC or hyperlinks that take you to a specific place in the book.) There is a way to move 10% at a time on the Kindle 1, but that feature is not on the Kindle 2 for some unknown reason. Not on the Kindle 2, but you can on the Kindle DX. (I'm speaking about text. With the unsupported image viewer you can view pictures in landscape mode.) |
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#17 |
Provocateur
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Columbus, OH
Device: Kindle Touch, Kindle 2, Kindle DX, iPhone 3GS
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If you plan to read the Kindle 2 in direct sunlight, be advised that some Kindle 2s have an issue where the screen fades during page turning in direct sulight, making the text difficult or impossible to read. Amazon will usually replace such a defective Kindle 2 for free, but you may have to go through several returns to get one that doesn't have this issue.
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#18 |
Zealot
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Join Date: May 2009
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I'd like to reiterate Question(s) 2. I'm reading some reviews and some people complain of the battery burning out - and having to send it back or spend 200 dollars to fix it. Is this a common problem or do some people just have bad luck?
Please answer my latest questions (a few responses above) if you can. Thanks for all the help. |
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#19 | ||
Zealot
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Thanks. |
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#20 | |
Zealot
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![]() How fast do they send the returns? |
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#21 | |
Wizard
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Device: Palm>Ebookman>IPaq>Axim>Cybook>Kndl2>IPAD>Kndl3SO>Voyager>Oasis
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1) Location: The Kindle does not have pages, but it does have location. As I understand it, a location is like a chunk of memory. I don't really know how big a typical chunk is; however, the book that I am reading now has 3,698 locations. Whereas the number of pages in a book can change based on font size, location number 1,234 (to pick a random example) should be the exact same spot in the book, irrespective of the font or font-size. At the bottom of each page is a display that shows the locations on the current page. As well as the total locations in the book. For example, I have dummied up the location display for my current book below: 75% Locations 2801-8 3698 ================================____________ This display indicates that I am 75% done with the book (also shown in the bar chart represented by the "="), and that the current page shows locations 2801 through 2808. The last location in the book is 3698. I can use the menu to go to any location. Therefore, I can "Go To Location 3100". If the spot I am looking for is after that, I can split half the remaining difference and "Go To Location 3300". Eventually I will narrow down to the correct location. 2) Search: The Kindle supports a full text search. If I can remember some fairly specific text passage this makes it easy to find a spot. I search for it and it takes me directly to the correct spot. 3) Page turning: The K2 uses the latest Epson controller. This means that simple page turns are faster than in the past. I used to own a Cybook and it took me forever to turn pages. If I have to page forward to a new spot, it is relatively fast for the Kindle. However, I would make one comment about page turning and power consumption. Remember that eInk platforms are rated according to page turns, not time. Let's say you skip through a book using lots of page turns. Each page turn uses a similar amount of energy as-if you actually read the same amount of pages. In other words, 100 page turns uses a given amount of energy whether the page is displayed for two seconds or two minutes. Therefore, if your battery is low, skimming quickly through the book using the page turn will not save you a lot in terms of battery life. |
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#22 |
Groupie
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Location: Baltimore
Device: Amazon Kindle 2
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There are two things that appear to me to be different as far as page jumping from K1 to K2 - at least I have not found the equivalent functionality on the K2.
1. On the K1 when one held alt and hit next page it jumped more than one "page", I equated it to a ten page jump (though I am sure it was of a greater scale). 2. Also on the K1 when one positioned the wheel on the page count bar one could skip directly to the next or previous bookmark using the next/previous page bars. |
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#23 | ||
Zealot
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Also, as I asked previously, does Sony have the ability to skip ahead by more than one page at a time, or does it offer any other advantages for navigation? Quote:
Last edited by enarchay; 05-24-2009 at 02:13 PM. |
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#24 |
Wizard
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Device: Palm>Ebookman>IPaq>Axim>Cybook>Kndl2>IPAD>Kndl3SO>Voyager>Oasis
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#25 | |
Wizard
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Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: USA
Device: Kindle, iPad (not used much for reading)
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It is my understanding that the Sony calls them page numbers, but they have no more correlation to page numbers in some physical edition than the Kindle's location numbers do. |
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#26 | |
Zealot
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#27 |
Wizard
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Device: Kindle, iPad (not used much for reading)
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Actually, locations are more precise: one location is something like 100 bytes, not one screen-full of text. I think the Sony re-numbers the "pages" when you resize the font, too, which the Kindle does not. A location is the same place in the book, regardless of font size.
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#28 | |
Zealot
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#29 | |
Wizard
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Device: Palm>Ebookman>IPaq>Axim>Cybook>Kndl2>IPAD>Kndl3SO>Voyager>Oasis
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However, there is a reason that pages are a bad measure. Think of it this way. You want to tell your friend how to find something on his/her reader. "Its on page 231 of the text in the first paragraph." Now the problem is that page 234 does not contain the same words on his text as on yours because you both select different fonts and font sizes. This means that your texts will contain different page numbers. Locations are tied to the physical book location. It doesn't matter what the screen is set at. If you tell your fried to go to location 2310 then both of you will see the same text. Therefore, locations are more precise for two reasons. 1) In typical font sizes they specify a place at a finer level of detail than pages. 2) They are not affected by changing fonts or font sizes. |
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#30 |
Guru
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Most non-fiction books and nearly all reference books have TOC's. The books most likely not to have TOC's are novels, especially contemporary popular fiction. IMO, most don't really need them.
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