Kindle DX Cover
Kindle DX Cover
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| Black Leather Premium Kroo Protective Carry… $24.99 |
Kindle 2 River Nubuck Leather Sleeve Case C… |
Kindle DX Cover
![]() |
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| Black Leather Premium Kroo Protective Carry… $24.99 |
Kindle 2 River Nubuck Leather Sleeve Case C… |
Accessories For Kindle DX
Customer Reviews : Kindle DX
With the Kindle DX I can have almost all of the lovely stories that I rememebr from my younger days as well as new things from up and coming writers that I like. I hae problems grasping things (arthritis), but the Kindle DX is very easy for me to use and with the ability to chnage the font I can read easily with out the eye strain that had given me such bad head aches.
Like my computer this is another window to the world outside and it makes my life richer every time I pick it up. I recommend it to anyone who like reading but is short on storage or who just wants to be able to have their favorites at the flick of a switch.
Yes they don’t have every book but I am sure that will continue to grow in scope as time goes by, where else are you going to able to store 3,000 plus books in an area the aise of a magazine? I really like the rotation thing as well if I get tired of holding it upright I just open out the cover (I got the nice leather one) and stand it up on it’s own.
| By | Arry’shanna-Selene |
Amazon Launches Kindle DX
Amazon introduced the third edition of its Kindle this morning, a version that, in addition to offering trade books, will now display textbooks, computer books and cookbooks on a 9.7 inch electronic display screen that includes 16 shades of grade—the same gray-scale as the Kindle 2. Magazines and newspapers, already available on the Kindle, will increase their presence on the new device. Price for Kindle DX is $489 and Amazon will start shipping the device in the summer.
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos was present at the press conference at Pace University in lower Manhattan to unveil the Kindle DX, which is essentially a larger, enhanced version of the Kindle 2. Bezos quicky reviewed the commercial history of the Kindle beginning with the growth in titles available—90,000 titles in 2007 up to 275,000 today. “We have what people want to read,” he said noting as well the low battery consumption, nonbacklit e-ink screen, no computer needed and most importantly, 24-7 wireless connectivity on a cell phone network—“no need to run looking for hot spots,” said.
Amazon hopes the larger screen and improved display will entice students to use Kindle DX and Cengage, Pearson, and John Wiley have agreed to make textbooks available through Kindle DX. Arizona State, Case Western Reserve, Princeton, Reed College, Pace—unannounced at the press conference—and Darden School of Business at the University of Virginia will launch trial programs this fall in which they will distribute Kindle DX to students across a range of subjects. “We look forward to seeing how the device affects the participation of both students and faculty in the educational experience,” said Barbara Snyder, president of Case Western.
The controversial text to speech function will be enabled on the Kindle DX. According to Laura Porco, director of Kindle books, the university pilot program will have “hundreds to thousands” of students and include “hundreds to thousands” of textbooks. Textbook prices, she said, will be unchanged. Geoffrey Brackett, provost for academic affairs at Pace, said Pace would have about 50 students in “discreet sections of coursework” included in the pilot. And while he suggested that Pace would likely subsidize the price of the devices to some extent, he said students would likely pay for the textbooks. But he emphasized that the details of the pilot arrangement were still being negotiated. “We think this will be highly useful and efficient for students,” he said.
To induce newspaper readers to use Kindle DX, Amazon is teaming with The New York Times (Times publisher A. O. Sulzberger Jr. was at the press conference), the Boston Globe and Washington Post in a program that will let would-be subscribers who live in areas where there is no home delivery to buy the Kindle DX at a reduced price if they agree to subscribe to a long-term subscription to the paper via the Kindle DX.
By Jim Milliot and Calvin Reid
Group Sues to Stop Kindle DX Deployment at ASU
Amazon Kindle News) The National Federation of the Blind (NFB) and the American Council of the Blind (ACB) has filed a lawsuit against Arizona State University to stop the University from purchasing the Amazon Kindle DX to replace textbooks in the classroom. Both the NFB and ACB say that the Amazon Kindle DX cannot be used by blind students. The main contentions in the lawsuit is that while the Kindle DX has a text-to-speech feature, the menus to select a book or purchase a book are not blind-friendly, making it impossible to select textbooks for download.
Six educational institutions, including ASU, are deploying the Kindle DX as part of a pilot project to assess the role of electronic textbooks in the classroom. The NFB and ACB have also filed complaints with the Office for Civil Rights of the U.S. Department of Education and the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, asking for investigations of these five institutions, which are: Case Western Reserve University, the Darden School of Business at the University of Virginia, Pace University, Princeton University, and Reed College. The lawsuit and complaints allege violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
“Given the highly-advanced technology involved, there is no good reason that Amazon’s Kindle DX device should be inaccessible to blind students,” says Dr. Marc Maurer, President of the National Federation of the Blind. “Amazon could have used the same text-to-speech technology that reads e-books on the device aloud to make its menus accessible to the blind, but it chose not to do so. Worse yet, six American higher education institutions that are subject to federal laws requiring that they not discriminate against students with disabilities plan to deploy this device, even though they know that it cannot be used by blind students. The National Federation of the Blind will not tolerate this unconscionable discrimination against and callous indifference to the right of blind students to receive an equal education. We hope that this situation can be rectified in a manner that allows this exciting new reading technology to be made available to blind and sighted students alike.”
By Joe Tracy
Why You Should Get a Kindle DX
Amazon is one of the most innovative companies in the world. It has been around for years and has been transformed from a small book retailer to a huge company in a matter of years. Amazon’s latest project involves getting people to switch from paper books to digital content. Amazon’s weapon? The Kindle! This is a gadget that lets you read documents and take thousands of books with you on the go. And since the device is using the latest E-ink technology, you are not going to hurt your eyes with Kindle like you would by staring at a monitor.
Kindle DX is the latest Amazon gadget that tries to address some of the concerns that shoppers had about its predecessor. You get a 9.7 inch screen that now lets you read college textbooks and technical documents without going for the next page button all the time. That was one of the main complaints about the ebook readers on the market, but with this gizmo you can read all kinds of documents on the go. You can also rotate the screen and read your content in portrait or landscape mode.
Amazon’s latest gizmo now provides native support for PDF. Prior to the introduction of Kindle DX, you had to convert your PDF documents in order to read them on your device. Now, you don’t have to do that. In addition, you can read .docx documents on your gadget too. And you can sync your device with your iPhone using the Whisphersync service.
What I like about Kindle DX is the fact that the battery life hasn’t suffered at all. You still go for 2 weeks between each and every charge, which means you don’t have to keep looking for your adapter to charge your gizmo. Overall, if you are looking for a device to help you never buy paper books again, this is the one to own.
Kindle DX : Satisfied but looking forward to software improvements
In my initial review of the Kindle DX I rated it 3 stars, but am revising that upward to 4 stars as I have used it more. This is primarily due to the excellent readability of the screen and the sheer utility of the device. I had not bought a Kindle previously because of lack of true PDF support and returned a Sony Reader because of very poor PDF support. One of my key reasons for wanting the Kindle DX was the promised PDF support. My impressions so far:
1. The software puts Kindle format reading ahead of PDF, MP3, and browser support. I am fine with that to start, but hope Amazon will put the resources behind software updates to improve the Kindle DX for these other data types.
2. The PDF support is servicable, but has room for improvement. For PDF articles it does a great job. For PDF books downloaded from the web (Google books or Internet Archive), will occasionally get “Some elements on this page could not be displayed” messages. These pages take extra long time to render. Hopefully, Amazon will identify the sources of these “elements” and improve the PDF rendering. As stated in other reviews, the Kindle DX does not support PDF index and other features, which is not ideal for book-length PDFs. Also, in general loading and turning pages in PDF is somewhat slower than the book formats.
3. PDF cropping of white space is inconsistent. On clean PDF articles, it works great. On scanned books from the web in general will not work (I assume it is interpreting the noise lines near the edge as a real feature). A zoom would be helpful here with no loss of content.
4. It is nice and convenient to have audio capability built in, eliminating the need to carry a separate audio player. However, the experimental version included is so rudimentary it is barely usable. The MP3’s sound nice (thru headphones, marginal thru speakers). There are play, stop, and forward buttons, but they forgot the back button. One needs to let the last song play out before it will loop back to the beginning. Add to this you cannot view what MP3’s are on the machine (except by using your computer in USB mode) nor set the play order. Hopefully Amazon will create some kind of audio player to create at least basic functionality.
5. Keyboard buttons could have been a little bigger and more spread out in the same space on the bottom of the Kindle DX. That would have helped a lot. Typing into webpages is somewhat painful. I consider this a lesser sin for this generation of book reader, but would like to see something better in future generations.
6. Some kind of foldering system would be nice. At this point I have loaded ~100 files, which take 7 pages on the home screen to go thru. Again, I hope Amazon puts the resources behind improving the software.
In the future, I can imagine a Kindle size device that is a great book reader that you can read in bed, on an airplane, or just generally traveling about. It will have an audio player. It will be in color, providing full support to color books and PDF. It will also likely include a web browser (though how web access is paid for is separate issue). Nothing like this exists on the market today (net books and tablets just are not there yet either). Hopefully someone will see this as a vision for a product that will displace all current book readers.
The Kindle DX is a step in that direction, and has some really nice characteristics-excellent screen rendering, very long battery life (4 days and still have half the initial charge), and portability. These are the reasons that justify to me purchasing the Kindle DX over a netbook or tablet for reading books and PDFs. I think the vision above is a few years away, and the Kindle DX can provide a lot of value now, so I am overall happy with my purchase. I hope Amazon will make me even happier over time by software improvements.
BY Thomas Block