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Name Lips
02-25-2009, 04:20 PM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29354846/


Beyond bragging rights, is this single-function gadget now worth the price?

Amazon’s upgraded e-book reader, Kindle 2, has many attributes that gadget freaks will find irresistible. It’s got wireless 3G. (Ooh!) It’s slim and elegant. (Ah!) It’s got a luscious, 16-shade display and can handle 1,500 books at a time. (Wow!)

Hands down, though, the very best feature of this hotly anticipated gadget is the ability to lord it over your envious friends. I just hooked up with Kindle 2 this morning, and already I’m insufferable. Just ask my co-workers.

Thanks to the intuitive navigation, QWERTY keyboard and lightning-quick downloads, I’m quoting text from books I’ve never read. What’s more, the Oxford Dictionary tool quickly defines words on the page so that I sort of even know what I’m talking about. Why, I’ve never sounded so smart or pompous!

Bragging rights aside, there is the product itself ... the super awesome feather-light product I have locked in a lovesick gaze even as I type. True, at $359, Kindle 2 is a pricey bit of technology, especially for something that excels at just one thing — book readin’. That puts it in the same neighborhood as a multi-tasking iPhone (sans service contract), and still too expensive to risk reading in the bathroom or on the beach. But you know what they say: You can never be too expensive or too thin … if you’re an e-reader, that is.

Not all the tech geeks see Kindle 2 as worthy of love or money — at least that’s what they say. I suspect they’re all jealous. For example, NBC news Web producer and Clicked blogger Will Femia grumbled that he couldn’t imagine Kindle replacing the stack of disheveled newspapers on the counter of his morning coffee shop. Scoop columnist and original-recipe Kindle owner Courtney Hazlett took one look at K2 (my pet name) and declared, "I am in a legitimate love affair with my Kindle, and I now have no plans to break up."

Hazlett’s beef? She prefers the iPod-like wheel navigation of the earlier model over K2’s joystick-style toggle switch. I admit that the joystick is less receptive than the original’s navigational wheel. It also seems less durable and a magnet for crumbs, dust and peanut butter. (Yes, peanut butter. I’m a slob. Shut up.)

Know-it-all interactive editor Phil Zepeda (who builds iPhone apps in his spare time — geek!) gripes that the dual "next page" buttons on either side of the lovely, symmetrical K2 weren't responsive to a normal amount of pressure. And two "next page" options are confusing to fingers, causing accidental "next page" turns when you mean to go back, and vice versa. I grudgingly agree, the K2 should have a "next page" button on one side and "previous page" button on the other.

(And no, the Kindle 2 does not feature a touch screen — something I found out the hard way after jamming my finger into the six-inch screen repeatedly.)

Whatever. At least office I.T. guy Mike Gee isn’t a hater. He described K2 as "easier to navigate than (an) actual book; an improvement on book technology." The search function allows you to instantly find words or phrases rather than tediously flipping around for the part you underlined. And that’s another thing, corporeal book fans: Kindle 2 lets you to save book passages and add notes on individual pages.

Unfortunately, the lovely white case (with brushed metal backing) surrounding the screen will surely fall victim to grubby finger splotches, and as with the original model, K2 is not dishwasher safe.

If the K2 does get too filthy to look at, however, I can always shut my eyes as it reads to me via the text-to-voice function. Sure, the headphone jack is at the top the device, making the cord a source of irritation while looking at the screen. (Hello, Amazon! Who designed this thing?) But the K2 has two decent-sounding speakers in the back.

OK, K2’s speaking voice — available in male and female — is just a tad more animated than Stephen Hawking reading you a bedtime story. And it sure as heck won’t replace Stephen Colbert’s recitation of his own best seller, "I Am America (And So Can You!)" or any of the Harry Potter tomes narrated by Jim Dale (not that any Harry Potter books are available yet for Kindle, another frustration). Still, it’s a function that can come in handy — though I wouldn’t recommend the sleep-inducing drone if you’re going to be driving.

Those who insist on finding flaw with perfection may whine about the fact that despite the K2’s extra shades of gray — 16 over the original model’s four — it doesn’t display illustrations worth beans. That’s no matter to me, as I wasn’t getting rid of my first edition "Watchmen" graphic novel anyway. For straight up, no-diagram-needing reading, Kindle’s electronic ink display is a delight for the eyes.

E Ink technology looks eerily similar to actual ink on paper. If your gripe with Kindle 2 is that you don’t want to stare at a computer all day at work and then a Kindle screen at home, never fear. Unlike LCD screens used on computers and cell phones, E Ink reflects light, and once the text is on the screen, it's not constantly refreshing pixels. That saves your optic nerves as well as a ton of power, reducing the need to recharge K2 as frequently as a laptop or cell phone.

Not everyone sees E Ink as perfection. Bedtime readers may lament the lack of backlighting, ignoring the fact that the K2 is just looking out for your eyes. The other thing is, each page does not refresh instantly as you flip through. There’s a few seconds of lag time as the screen blacks out and reloads — a tic common to all E Ink e-books, and something that probably needs to change before Kindle conquers the world.

How does K2 compare to other e-readers? Who cares? Part of K2’s appeal is its prestige factor as "the iPod of books." At $299, the Sony Reader, released last year, remains Kindle 2’s main competition, but what it saves in money it lacks in convenience. Books must be downloaded manually to the Sony model. Meanwhile, K2, thanks to its 3G access provided by Sprint, downloads books immediately either through the device or your online Amazon account.

So why does Kindle 2 cost just so darn much? When you take into account what you get for the money, it starts to make sense — almost. There’s no charge for the 3G wireless. While you can’t text or make calls, K2 does allow MP3 downloads, mobile-style Web surfing and will receive e-mails for a nominal fee. If you’re big into the latest best sellers, Amazon offers Kindle versions for $9.99, as well as Kindle subscriptions to newspapers (including The New York Times) and popular blogs for $1.99 a month each.

Still, even with Amazon’s discounted e-books, the hold-steady $359 cost of the actual hardware assures that the Kindle 2 is a toy for the economically fortunate and foolish — and not something meant for someone in the habit of leaving electronics on the bus. But until this Kindle 2 joins two iPods, one cell phone and my favorite pink and black stripy scarf in the Bronx/Manhattan Express netherworld, I have one and it’s awesome.

http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/kindle.png

doc
02-25-2009, 04:22 PM
gimme me a book anytime

Name Lips
02-25-2009, 04:27 PM
Hitchhiker's jokes aside, I'm waiting for the eventual development of a Universal Book. E-Ink pages can theoretically be extremely thin - as thin as a regular sheet of paper - and very durable. Eventually we'll be seeing a machine that looks and feels like a regular book - perhaps a thin 20 pages long. Except each page is dynamic and can display anything you want - page flipping included. A universal book that contains everything you could possibly imagine. All the electronics and systems would be in the spine.

doc
02-25-2009, 04:41 PM
You'll have to wait till Oct. for the 6th book

As previously announced, Penguin is to publish And Another Thing, the 6th novel in the ever-more increasingly inaccurately named Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy trilogy, by international bestselling children’s writer, Eoin Colfer. Publication has been set for Monday 12th October 09, which is also the 30th anniversary of publication of the first book in the late Douglas Adams’ phenomenally successful series.


The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy started life as a radio series in 1978 and subsequently became five best-selling novels, the first being published in paperback by Pan Books on 12th October 1979. It was an instant hit, reaching number one in the bestseller charts two weeks after publication and went on to be translated into over 35 languages. By 2000 it had sold over 14 million copies worldwide. It was also remade as a Bafta-winning TV series, dramatized for the West End stage and made in to a film starring Martin Freeman, Bill Nighy, John Malkowich and many more.


Simultaneous global publication of And Another Thing by Eoin Colfer will take place on the 30th anniversary of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. So far rights have been sold to Hyperion in the US and to other prominent publishers in Germany, Italy, France, Denmark, Sweden and Finland.



Alex Clarke, Editorial Director, Penguin UK, said ‘I have been talking to Eoin, who tells us he is busy working out just how it is he is going to bring back Arthur, Ford and Trillian from the dead. We are all hugely looking forward to the publishing event of 2009.’



Since the announcement that Eoin Colfer is to continue the Hitchhiker series Artemis Fowl and Hitchhiker fan forums have been buzzing with a mixture of eager anticipation and consternation. Troublerocks on eoincolfer.com says, ‘I love Hitchhiker’s. I’m glad Eoin is doing it. It’s nice to know a great author we know will continue the GttG books.’ Scratch on the Douglas Adams Continuum forum says, ‘Surely this can’t be? Sounds ghastly . . . This whole affair makes me feel like my underpants are made out of wood’ while Duke of Dunstable says, ‘I suppose I am appalledly interested.’

Random Encounter
02-26-2009, 08:43 AM
Books 4 and 5 were already too many. With 5 being Adams way of ending a series he was obviously sick of. I thought 4 was really weak and 5 was complete crap. Frankly everything he wrote after sobering up tried to make too much sense to be as funny as his earlier works.

Dacke
02-27-2009, 12:44 AM
Books 4 and 5 were already too many. With 5 being Adams way of ending a series he was obviously sick of. I thought 4 was really weak and 5 was complete crap. Frankly everything he wrote after sobering up tried to make too much sense to be as funny as his earlier works.
In fairness, Adams was working on a part 6 when he passed away (The Salmon of Doubt - he originally planned to write a third Dirk Gently book, but after a while he figured it would work better as a Hitch-Hiker book). Book 5 was a bit of a special case. At the time, he was sick of the HH universe, and wanted to write a book about endangered species. His publisher basically told him "There's no way that's gonna sell, but we'll humor you if you also do a new HH book." That's the process that gave us Last Chance to See and Mostly Harmless, the latter being written to put a kabosh into further attempts at similar blackmail. But a few years later he apparently changed his mind.

Pigs in Space
02-27-2009, 05:43 AM
Books 4 and 5 were already too many. With 5 being Adams way of ending a series he was obviously sick of. I thought 4 was really weak and 5 was complete crap. Frankly everything he wrote after sobering up tried to make too much sense to be as funny as his earlier works.

You're going to hell for that. A hell with no towels.