See article below for reasons why you should buy a Kindle.
Have a Kindle already and want to load it with great books at low cost? Here are your options:
1) We offer over a thousand books for wireless delivery to your Kindle from Amazon for 99 cents each. To see what's available, please check
www.samizdat.com/kindle2) Buy our book collection CDs or DVDs. The vast majority of those books are in plain-text format, which means you can simply copy them from your computer to your Kindle with the USB cable, and then read them on your Kindle. This means you can buy great classics for as little as a penny a book (that's the cost when you buy our Complete Book DVD set) as opposed to the usual price of 99 cents for such books at Amazon.
3) Join our Free Ebook of the Week and/or Free Kid's Book of the Week and get free samples by email that you can copy to your Kindle. To join, just send me your request by email
seltzer@samizdat.com4) Buy the Kindle edition of our Books of the Western Canon CD,
Kindle edition with 798 books, optimized for the Kindle (in .prc format).
Want to buy a Kindle? Please use this link, and I'll get referral credit.
Why You Should Buy an Amazon Kindle Book Reader
I've been publishing electronic books for 15 years, but until now I've
only read them on a computer, never on a special handheld reading gadget.
I didn't feel the need. Like someone who has never tasted chocolate
or never touched ice doesn't feel the need...
I'm also an obsessive reader. I've kept a list of every book I've
read since I was in the sixth grade -- fifty years ago. Over 3000 books.
http://www.samizdat.com/readall.html
Reading is an important part of my life.
Now Amazon's Kindle has changed reading for me -- irreversibly.
I just got my Kindle two days ago. It's excellent, far better
than expected. The drawbacks that I anticipated (and rambled on about
in my blog) were bogus. Amazon's Kindle Book Reader deserves an unqualified
“BUY!” recommendation. (NB -- for now, this device is for the sighted only,
not the blind.)
First revelation: Easy on the eyes. You have to see it
to appreciate it, but “digital ink” makes a big difference. With
digital ink, the screen looks like paper, with the text visible as reflected
light, rather than light passing through a screen (as with computer monitors).
The digital ink is very easy on the eyes, so you can read longer without
fatigue. And you can select the type size (six choices) to suit your
eyes and tastes. In the past, people read electronic books when they
had no choice (due to availability or cost or because they needed to do
searches), and used printed books far more often, not just from habit,
but also for comfort and convenience and portability. Now, finally,
there's a gadget that gives the advantage to electronic books.
Second revelation: It can use plain-text files. The Kindle comes
with about 180 Mbytes of storage (which Amazon translates as room for about
200 books). When you connect it to your PC or Mac, it appears to
your computer like an external storage device. You can move files
to and from it as easily as you do with flash memory. And you can
read plain-text files on your Kindle without having to convert them to
Kindle's special format. That means (this is a plug) nearly all the
books on our CD and DVD book collections are immediately readable on the
Kindle. http://samizdat.stores.yahoo.net/
For our customers, the Kindle is the ideal reading device that they have
been dreaming of. And for Kindle users, our book collections are
the ideal source of great reading material at extremely low cost (as low
as a penny a book with our Complete Book 3-DVD set, as opposed to a typical
cost of 99 cents per public domain book at Amazon's Kindle Store).
Third revelation: You can easily and inexpensively expand the storage
space to hold thousands of books. The Kindle has a slot for you to
add an SD memory card. Nowadays a 2 gig card typically sells for
about $13, 4 gig for $32, 8 gig for $60, and prices for this kind of storage
have been falling. In other words, you don't need to wait for Amazon to
come out with a new model to be able to expand your library beyond 200
books. With the typical plain-text book taking up about 500 kbytes
(less than the typical specially formatted book that Amazon uses as a benchmark),
one gig of storage can hold about 2,000 books. That means that an
eight gig SD card should hold about 16,000 books -- (which, by the way,
is close to the size of our Complete Book DVD set).
Fourth revelation: Unexpected extras.
-
You don't need a computer at all, much less a computer connected to the
Internet, and you don't need to pay any monthly service fees to enjoy your
Kindle. You can buy and receive books over the built-in wireless connection,
hassle-free, never needing any technical knowledge, not even needing to
type in an Internet address.
-
The Kindle has a small, but very usable keyboard and a search function
that makes it easy to find what you want within a book or in all the files
on your Kindle. It also has easy ways to highlight text, make annotations,
and to put copies of favorite pages/passages in a clipboard area. At first
I thought I'd move books onto the Kindle when I wanted to read them, and
delete them when I was done, and hence I wouldn't need expanded storage
capacity. Now I realize I'm going to want to keep them all on the
Kindle with my personal notes and highlighting.
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Navigating from page to page and from book to book is intuitive, (helped
by left-right page turning, rather than up-down scrolling). If you stop
reading a book before you finish, the next time you turn on the gadget
or go to that book, you'll start where you left off. And there are
multiple ways to navigate through a text.
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The rechargeable battery appears to last for days of use (apparently because
the digital ink draws little power). You can continue to read and
otherwise use the unit while it recharges.
-
Not only can you easily copy plain-text files to your Kindle, you can also
copy MP3 files, so you can (with headphones) listen to music while reading.
(Quick tip -- on the back next to the on-off button, is a switch for turning
the audio on or off. If you aren't listening to anything, make sure that's
in the off position, or your batteries will run down far faster than necessary.)
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You can also use your Kindle to wirelessly browse the Web without fees.
When you elect to go to the Web, you are presented with only about a dozen
choices, of which Amazon.com is, of course, number one. But second
on the list is Google, and while it's a bit awkward, combining use of the
little keyboard and following the choices you are presented, you can generate
lists of Google search results and by selecting items you can go just about
anywhere on the Web. Simple text shows up best; video and special effects
not at all.
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The Kindle Store shows up very much like the Kindle Books area at Amazon.com
does on a PC (digital ink displays graphics well, but only in black and
white). You can find anything you want. For example, search
for the word “samizdat” and you get a listing of the over 1,000 Kindle
books that we offer. Do a search for “samizdat dickens” or “samizdat”
followed by any other classic author and you'll get a list of our offerings
by that author. Then you can make the online purchase with a few quick
clicks and the book is immediately delivered to your Kindle, wirelessly.
The process is ridiculously convenient.
I expected the Kindle would be good for best-sellers and newspaper/magazine
subscriptions because of the immediate wireless delivery. I expected
convenience in buying and receiving books from just about anywhere; and
being able to carry a couple hundred books in my pocket. But I got
far more than that. I didn’t expect the device to be so easy on the
eyes or that a user could easily to multiply the storage capacity.
And I was surprised that the Kindle accepts plain-text files without any
changes, letting me copy books of that kind to my Kindle from my computer
over a USB cable. That ability means that I can now read on my Kindle any
of the 15,000 books that I have collected and organized on CDs and DVDs.
http://samizdat.stores.yahoo.net/
I'm hooked, and the folks who see me using it seem to get hooked quickly
too.
Suggestions welcome. Please email me at seltzer@samizdat.com