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Computers

Amazon Suspends Kindle Account After Too Many Product Returns


The Kindle should be a pretty straight forward proposition, but this just goes to show you how sometimes folks can stir up controversy even with something as innocuous as an e-book reader. First there was the hassle with the Writers Guild over text-to-speech, and then Amazon threatened MobileRead with legal action for merely linking to software they didn't take kindly too. And now we're hearing alarming tales of Kindle owners who have had their accounts turned off when inadvertently running afoul of company policy. Case in point, a user on the MobileRead forums reports being locked out of his account for what was termed an "extraordinary" rate of returns (that is, he returned electronics that arrived damaged or defective). Because of this, our man was unable to purchase new books for his device, or even check out magazine / newspaper / blog subscriptions he had already paid for. Luckily, this gentleman was able to plead his case and get his account reactivated -- but other users haven't been quite so fortunate. We'll be keeping an eye on you, Amazon -- so let's try and play nice for now on.

[Via Channel Web]

Computers

Kindle 2 Users Complain of Eye Strain


You know how it is: Amazon refreshes the Kindle, makes some upgrades, and everybody's happy. Almost. It seems that a small but vocal minority is really, really not into the way that fonts are rendered on the new device. For real. Y'see, the newest iteration of the e-reader sports font smoothing algorithms and sixteen levels of gray (as opposed to four levels on the original). For sure, these enhancements make for prettier pictures, but on the downside it causes text to blur significantly when displaying fonts in the smallest three sizes. If you're one of the disgruntled Kindle 2 owners looking for some relief for your tired eyes, there are a couple options available to you. You might want to try the Unicode Fonts Hack, which will allow you to replace the system font for something more to your liking. Or you could hop on over to Amazon's Kindle forum, where you can commiserate with your fellow angry customers (OK, not really a solution -- but possibly therapeutic). You could wait for the rumored Kindle with a larger screen to arrive (no telling when or if that's gonna happen), or even downgrade to a first gen device, as some folks already have. Or you can read a book. One thing you can't do? You can't stop progress.

[Via Wired]

Read - Amazon: Please make the text darker on Kindle 2
Read - Unicode Fonts Hack

Sony Reader Gets 500,000 New Book Titles From Google


It's a good time to be a Sony Reader owner.

Google has just made 500,000 titles from its massive public-domain book collection accessible to users of Sony's popular e-book reader. This is the first time Google has made these resources available to such a device, effectively pushing Sony's Reader past Amazon's Kindle (which offers about 240,000 titles) in terms of books available for the device.

All of the public-domain titles were published before 1923, but include many classics of fiction and non-fiction. It's a big day for literature lovers everywhere, since you can now finally unfetter H.P. Lovecraft's "The Call of Cthulhu" from the Google-hosted PDF version and take it with you in the new Electronic Publication Format (EPUB). Your move, Amazon. [From: thestreet]


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Computers

A $41,916 E-book?


Either Amazon's $41,916 list price is a mistake or Malcolm Barnes is finally about to buy that BMW. At $137 a page, we'd recommend you read and re-read the sample for Practical Variable Speed Drives and Power Electronics a few times before pulling the trigger, Sparky.

Computers, Celebrities

Jeff Bezos Chats Up the Kindle 2 with Jon Stewart


Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos showed up at Jon Stewart's pad the other day to discuss the Kindle 2, and Jon seemed fairly unimpressed. They were just finally getting into a groove when Bezos dropped the price bomb, and then their fleeting segment was over. It's embedded after the break. Amazon VP Ian Freed has also been chatting up the device, but in a more technical nature. On designing the Kindle he reiterates the "invisibility" design ethic surrounding the device, about making it "disappear" for the user. They also improved the cellular modem for improved reception, and also fended off features like a color screen that would shorten battery life, up the price and cause the device to generate more heat and make its presence known. As far as text to speech goes, he thinks it's good for short stretches of reading, and notes that it covers the vast majority of titles that aren't available in an audio format, but didn't speak specifically to the possible infringement of author rights.

Read - Jeff Bezos on The Daily Show
Read - Designing the Kindle 2

Read more →

Editor's Picks, Green Tech, Switched Video, Reviews

Hype Check: Amazon Kindle 2 (Hands-on Review)



We were able to get our hands on an Amazon Kindle 2 a few days before today's ship date. The next-generation e-book reader is lighter and thinner, has a longer battery life, and now includes text-to-speech capability, but for $359, is it worth upgrading from the original? More importantly, is it ready to replace your books? (Possibly, if you plan on reading or buying 72 books in the next year.). Check out our video above to see what's new and what we think of it.

Do you prefer printed books or e-readers like the Kindle?



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Audio/Video

Kindle 2 Reads Books Aloud, Perturbs Authors Guild



The newest generation of the Kindle, Amazon's digital reading device, can now read text aloud, and authors are not happy about it, USA Today reports.

While the original Kindle was able to display the texts of whatever book a user downloaded, the Kindle 2 is additionally capable of reading those downloaded books to the user, albeit it in a robotic monotone. This capability, and the potential to use more listenable reading voices, worries the Authors Guild. In a message sent to Guild members yesterday, a spokesperson identified the Kindle 2 as being a significant threat to the sale of audio books. The Guild requested members think about asking Amazon.com to remove the reading feature from the device.

While Amazon spokesman Drew Herdener has stated that the company is well within their rights to use the "Read to Me" feature, debate is swirling. Discussing the legal ramifications of the feature (with himself), Engadget's Nilay Patel identified the crux of the debate as the question of whether or not a book and an audio recording of that book are two distinct products. "What the Authors Guild seems to be saying," Patel explains, "is that while Amazon has the rights to sell the book, it doesn't have the rights to sell you the recording."

Read more →

Computers

Stephen King Joins Amazon to Unveil Kindle 2 E-Book Reader


Say goodbye to the Speak-and-Spell look of Amazon's Kindle, because this morning the company's co-founder and CEO, Jeff Bezos, and author Stephen King unveiled the Kindle 2, a slimmer, slicker, and lighter successor to the original Kindle that launched about 14 months ago (and which has already become one of Oprah's favorite devices).

Besides the size and weight shrink, the main new feature on the Kindle 2 is built-in text-to-speech capability that will literally read your book to you and a five-way joy-stick designed to make maneuverability around newspaper pages easier.

The new device will ship on February 24, but pre-orders are already being taken (and existing Kindle 1 owners will get first priority if they pre-order by Midnight tomorrow, February 10). The site is amazon.com/kindle2.

Do you prefer e-readers or printed newspapers and books?


Unfortunately, at $359, this Kindle is just as pricey as the last one. We wonder how it'll do in this new economy in which buying the hottest gear usually doesn't involve spending an arm and a leg. Arguably, the initial outlay of cash will pay for itself since books will cost no more than $9.99, well below the price of even most paperbacks these days. Regardless, we think it'll take a fast or super-avid reader to make it pay for itself in the next year.

Here are the highlights of the updated device (available after the jump):

Read more →

Amazon Kindle 2 Out on February 9?


It could mean anything that Amazon is hosting a press event Monday morning, February 9th at the Morgan Library here in New York City. Maybe they just want to talk about how much they enjoy huge archives of original manuscripts and the smell of aged paper. Whatever the case may be, the last time we went to an Amazon event, they ended up launching the Kindle, so it's not crazy to speculate that we very well could see the introduction of a new iteration of the successful e-book. We've pinged the company for more solid word, but it's been radio silence thus far. Of course, we'll be there live covering any news as it breaks, so just plan on being here... or being square.

Computers

Amazon's Kindle 2 Spotted in the Wild?


So much for Amazon's attempts to quell Kindle 2 rumors, eh? Talk of a replacement (or a pair of replacements) for Amazon's popular -- but very oddly-styled -- e-reader has been in the mix seemingly since the first model started shipping, and Boy Genius Report has scored shots of something that certainly looks like it could be in the legitimate pipeline. The revised device appears to address complaints over the original's look head-on, rounding the corners and ditching the oddball angles; the scroll wheel has been replaced with a joystick, the SD slot is gone (don't worry, there's at least a gig and a half on-board), and around back, we have grills that seem to suggest integrated stereo speakers. The display is basically the same size -- no color here yet, sorry -- so unless the sharp edges on your first-gen piece are driving you batty, it looks like this could be safely skipped by current owners while roping in new buyers who wouldn't have considered it before. Thing is, was ditching the scroll wheel and that trick mirrored bar in favor of a joystick really the right way to go? [From: Boy Genius Report]

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